Wednesday 31 August 2016

Meccano Set

Having installed a brand new washing machine I had to decide how I was going to fix it to the mounting frame. For the previous used machines I had just drilled through the frame at the base and bolted directly to the frame, which worked well. But as this is a brand new washing machine I was somewhat reluctant to just go drilling holes through the frame, and in any case the frame design of this one does not easily lend itself to that approach.

My solution was to construct a clamp system out of stainless bar. I removed the base cover from the washing machine, inserted bars across-ways and front-and-back over the frame base, and then bolted these to similar bars clamped against the underside of the mounting frame. Just tighten the whole lot up and that baby isn't going anywhere.*



* I say with reasonable confidence. However, I have attached a restraining cable to the back of the machine and bolted the other end to a hull rib - if she ever lets go at least she won't get launched across the engine room!

Sunday 28 August 2016

Sail Cover

OK, so I said with some luck we would have the sail cover finished this weekend.

No luck.

We are down to the fiddly bits now - zips, fasteners, leather trim, PVC liner around the mast section, and so on, so progress has slowed.

Next weekend, maybe. I hope so, I need to post about something other than this bloody cover.

Stitching in the PVC liner, to protect the fabric around the mast from the wire rope halyards etc.

Would be nice to have the long-arm version of the sewing machine.

Saturday 27 August 2016

That's not a chain-plate... THIS is a chain-plate.

I have started working on the lower saloon. I made a new headliner over the port side settee while I was repainting the headliners from the aft cabin, and of course once you start...

I stripped out one of the port side lockers which we had lined temporarily in California... Four years counts as temporary, doesn't it? I'm going to line it properly, but while I am at it I thought y'all might be interested in seeing what a real chain-plate looks like.


For a sense of scale, those bolts are 5/8" and the cupboard is about 1m wide. The chain-plate proper comes down and is bolted into a fabricated box section that has flanges at the back which are in turn bolted into the hull and through a bronze backer plate. The backer plate runs fore and aft under the ribs, and is a full length run between the lower stay chain-plates, a distance of about 1.6m. This backer plate is itself fastened into the hull along it's length (the columns of small fasteners you can see).

Certainly a different class of engineering from the little bits of stainless that count as chain-plates on a modern production boat.

Monday 22 August 2016

Cover me!

I hate winter. My blog becomes very boring.

This weekend we...worked on the sail cover. What a surprise. The good news is we did a test fit and it seems we actually got it all correct. Wow. I fitted all the snaps along the length of it, so now we just need to fit the zip etc at the front end, stich in the vinyl protection fabric around the mast section, and finish the tail. With a little (lot) of luck we will have it done next weekend.

Putting the mainsail back on so we can test fit the cover. Yes, it's as big a mission as it looks.

In the mean time I am repainting all the headliners from the master cabin that I made last season, as I was not happy with the paint finish. We also installed a brand new washing machine since our last one self-destructed in spectacular fashion at 1400rpm. Had a major "uh-oh" moment when it looked like it would not fit through the engine room door, but we made it with 5mm to spare.

Just. Want. Summer.

(Better crack on and finish those bulwarks though...)

Monday 15 August 2016

It just never ends...

This sail cover is a mission!  Almost there; we will be test-fitting it this week, and then hopefully getting the forward section all sewn up with the zip and velcro straps. But there is then some fiddly work on the tail end and we have to fit all the twist-locks along the bottom. I see a couple more Sunday afternoons to be consumed...



Sunday 7 August 2016

On Any Given Sunday

Still working through the mainsail cover. Today we got most of the mast section together. Next week comes all the fiddly bits. Otherwise, the weather continues to be total crap and nothing else is getting done.