Since I'm starting out on building a small sailing boat, I thought it might be useful for others to learn from my experience. This will be a log of the building project, and any problems and solutions along the way.
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Pictures at last
Monday, December 21, 2009
I’ve started painting the inside.
I’m painting at night, in the cold, with a site lamp and a head torch. I must look even stranger than usual.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Just a brief update
Monday, September 28, 2009
Thanks Guys
Thursday, September 24, 2009
From the Air
Monday, September 21, 2009
Helpful people
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Pics




Sunday, September 06, 2009
I no longer feel like a fraud referring to "my boat".
- Oak Sawdust from my sander
- Glass Spheres and Silica
- Glass Spheres and Microfibers.
Monday, August 31, 2009
So close.......
Sunday, August 23, 2009
burning the midnight oil....
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Cutting Limbers after the fact.
I will also reinforce the battens on both sides with an extra 1/2 inch from the transom to the next frame. Since these will be flat surfaces, I'll use Balcotan (Marine PU) for the Oak. Previous tests show it works just fine. My test lamination has been knocking about in the garden and in the shed on and off, unpainted for 2 years and it's still solid.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Getting there....
Monday, August 10, 2009
And this is what the inside looks like
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Oops
Remember me posting "Note to self: I still have the limbers to cut." back about here. Well I was busy congratulating myself on a nicely glued up panel, trimmed and all, when I realised I'd entirely forgotten about the limber holes in the battens and keel.
Thursday, August 06, 2009
1 Aft panel = Two evenings work
Monday, August 03, 2009
And now the Scarfes are cut
Friday, July 31, 2009
The front panels are rough cut....
Wiley X Brick RX
Monday, July 20, 2009
Glen L 14 Sailing Video
Monday, July 13, 2009
The Bottom

I've started the bottom planking.
Friday, July 10, 2009
I forgot to oil the screws....
Thursday, July 09, 2009
Glued and Temporarily screwed in place
Sunday, July 05, 2009
An hour here and there....

That was about all I got this weekend, but it was still progress.
Friday, July 03, 2009
Notch up a few more notches !!
Monday, June 29, 2009
When I get to turning it all over....
It still looks the same....
Sunday, June 21, 2009
The weather cleared up
Saturday, June 20, 2009
The Jig Works....
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Feckin Notches.....

Friday, June 12, 2009
More Long Sticks
Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Beale Park Boat Show 2009
I took Sarah out for a sail on Character Boat's Post Boat which ghosted along in the lightest breeze, until the wind just gave up all together and we had to resort to the outboard (is it still an outboard when it's in a motor well ? It's sort of an inboard outboard then)
Some folks from Honor Marine were staying at the same B&B. It would be hard to find more helpful people. Sadly, their boats for the show were not in the water, I would have loved to see them under sail.
If I was not building my own boat at the moment I'd have been working hard to decide which one to bring home 8-)
The folks from Flints Marine Chandlers were there with a stand full of nice toys. I see some damage to my credit card in the near future.
Sunday we went to Lego Land with the little un's. Well worth a visit if you are down near Windsor with Kiddies. And in mediocre weather, the queues for the rides were tiny.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Progress At Last.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Irish Sky Gray
- IrishDrabGray
- IrishDrizzleGray
- IrishDownpourGray
- IrishIt'sBeenRainingForDaysGray
- IrishWhere'sTheFeckinSunGray?
Sunday, May 10, 2009
A scarf in place
It was beautiful today, so we did some family things involving water slides and screaming, and then I added one of the forward side panels.
It was scarfed in place on the frame.
Some deep jaw clamps, and a deck screw provided pressure along the scarf.
And this is what it looks like from the inside. The plastic is the remains of a ziploc bag over a block which crosses the glue line, there's a deck screw applying pressure. It's tough and epoxy will not stick to it.
Broken drill bits.
This is now a problem, as traditional methods for extracting broken screws don't work well on the hard metal in drill bits.

Thursday, May 07, 2009
Pics

And a closeup of the tapered ply, ready to be joined to the forward panel.

The front panel will simply be fitted to the scarf and trimmed to fit the chines and sheer, so the exact positioning of the aft panel is not critical.
I coated the edges with epoxy as my tarp cover is far from ideal, and I wanted to avoid soaking the end grain if waterlogged tarp ended up lying against it.
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Some planking in place
A simple piece of folded wire allows you to mark the position for the screw.

There is a screw every 3 inches on the chine and the sheer clamp, the aft panels are 8 foot long, and theres another 4 or 5 screws on the transom.
The works out about 70 3/4" bronze screws.
Fuller stepped drill bits all the way. They drill the pilot hole, the shank hole and the countersink all in one go. Use care, they are fragile at the step, and if you drop or abuse them they will likely snap.
I started out with a Yankee, but moved onto my Mikata 14.4 NiMh Drill/Driver for the second panel. Set at 5 on the clutch, it sank the screws just below the surface every time. That's part of what you pay for with a good tool. Consistancy.
I have trimmed one side back to the chine and transom, the other side is awaiting my attention. Trimming to the sheer clamps will wait until it's all flipped over.
The ends of both panels have scarfs cut into them, the forward panels have matching scarfs. The forward panels are trimmed after they are put in place, so lining things up is easy.
I'll need a few temporary blocks on the back of the scarf and a few temporary screws to put it together, thickened epoxy will do the rest.
Pictures will follow soon.
Monday, April 27, 2009
Or Scarfing....
What about the plywood end grain in the butt?What about the flat spot in the panel where the thickness is doubled?
What about drainage on the bottom of the boat?What about the ugly butt block showing on the interior?
Suck it up and do proper scarfs. You've worked to long and hard to chicken out now.
- Glue them and put them on the boat. or
- Put them on the boat and Glue them
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Butt Blocks
- I don't have to store the 16 foot scarfed panels
- I can manage 8 foot panels all by myself without calling in help.
- From other Builders work, butt blocks are indistinguishable from scarfs in the end product.
"planking"
A sense of Urgency
Monday, April 20, 2009
ToDo List
- Cut & fit Plywood Skin
- 4 panels
- 2 of 2x16 foot, 2 of 3 x 16 foot - I have to scarf join 8 foot boards.
- Fit transition joints
- Glue & Screw into place
- Putty the screws.
- Fair Hull.
- Epoxy glass the Skin.
- Paint it.
- Flip it,
- Some internal framing 2 x 9' x 3 inches each side.
- Blocks for the coming (I want to round it at the front, even though the design is simply square.)
- Paint inside
- Seats + Varnish or Deck Oil
- floorboards + Varnish or Deck Oil
- Plywood deck
- Coamings
- Mast Step.
- Paint deck.
- Make up mast & boom, including sail track in mast & sheave for Mainsheet Halyard.
- Varnish mast & boom
- Fit mast hardware.
- Make up rigging.
- Make up centerboard, glass
- Make up rudder, glass, paint.
- Attach cleats, blocks, fairleads, rigging, sail tracks.
- Carve name plates.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Fair Enough....
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Detailed Bevelator Pictures


Sunday, April 12, 2009
Bevelator 1000 Pictures and Update

Thursday, April 09, 2009
Laminations
I think they will be better as a glue, fiberous and all that.
I see some careful consideration as I mark up the curve that I want to fair the lamination too. Some serious thinking, measureing, holding plywood in place to see how it will all fit together.
Given the surface area available to glue these things up, and given that the oak should all expand and contract in the same direction, I have no fears regarding Oak & Epoxy.
Time I guess will tell.
Monday, April 06, 2009
Thanks Harvey
The band saw made life easy for cutting 3/8" thick laminates from 2" Oak stock.
I replaced the rubber drive band, and the old blade, and added a new fence, total cost, a whole lot less than a new band saw.
It's such an innocuous machine, hardly as noisy as the Shop Vac when it's just running.
(For everyone else, Harvey had an old Band Saw in his workshop that he donated to my boat project)
Next I'll glue the laminates into place to build up the chine near the bow, and then use a batten above and below the chine to mark out a fair curve. A little work with a power plane, followed by a long sanding board and I should be back in business.
Thursday, April 02, 2009
That was a PITA
I decided that it would be better to remove the first laminate, and replace it with a correctly sized one, rather than try to just add more laminates and fair them down.
There is a concern that White Oak does not Glue up well with Epoxy.
I am no longer concerned about this. My Epoxy glues my White Oak just fine.
The only way to remove the laminate turned out to be cross cutting it down to the glue line every 1/2 inch or so, and chipping it out with a chisel, just like cutting a housing for a lap joint.
Even doing this, in most places the wood did not come off at the glue line, A sander with 80 grit will tidy up the mess this weekend.
I used some scrap ply to see how much extra material I need on the chine to ensure that the side and bottom planking meet at most at a 180 degree angle. It's about 5/8"
At least I think know what I need to do now.
I suspect some more time in the Thinking Chair before I set to it.
Monday, March 30, 2009
This is not good.....
Even with my lamination, my chine is too far inboard. It's not a great picture, but that grey thing is a straight edge running from the stem to the sheer strake. I have and bevelled the stem and started bevelling the sheer strake. The straight edge is sitting on part of the sheer that will be faired away. But not much. Even when I finish fairing the sheer, the chine will still sit inboard of the straight edge.
I think my lamination was too sharply tapered. I will either add another lamination, or more likely plane it back and add a single less tapered one. I suspect I'll build it up with ply tacking into place first to see exactly how much I need to build up.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Bevels R Us
I really should have taken a picture, but this should give you the general idea.
An aluminium strip is bolted to the side of the planer (there's a hole for bolting on a parallel guide).
The strip is edge down.
You alternately plane the chine and the keel, with the edge resting on the other. Take off a bit at a time and voila.
Dave
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Good, and not so good
The results are ok. I'll tidy up with a Stanley #4 Bailey.

If only it were all that good.
I was a little premature in my self congratulation over the nice joint between the chine and the stem. I still contend that the joint it very nice, it's just in the wrong place.
Now that I've started fairing, I can see that it's joined to the stem too far back.


My first thought was to trim the stem back to the chine, but on reflection that would change the entire profile of the stem, and I am not sure it would change it in a good way.
I see 2 oak battens about 3/8" thick at one end, tapering to nothing, laminated in place from the stem to about the first frame.
Wish me luck.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Fair Enough
- You get a feel for the job without messing it up in one fell swoop.
- Shavings are less annoying than saw dust when there's clothes drying on the line
- The sound of a sharp blade shaving oak is quite pleasant, a power planer is hardly musical.
- It's interesting to try it.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
In the Dark
Monday, March 09, 2009
It snowed. It's march fer feck's sake...
Then it snowed*. It's march fer feck's sake...
What else can I say, except it would be nice to be building indoors.
*Ok, Mostly it just rained, but it did snow for a little bit.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Polite Rain
I had just finished gluing up the port side (I refer to port and starboard as if I were sitting upside down in the boat, since it is currently upside down. This seems more correct. For absolute Clarity the port side is the side facing out into the garden in the photos) anyhow, as I was saying, I had just glued up the Sheer Clamp, all held in place with waxed deck screws and large washers. I was crouched in the gap between the bushes and the boat, just about to start drilling the holes for the starboard side when I felt a few drops of rain, then a few more, and like Cockroaches and Politicians, where there are one or two, there are always many many more.
Tarpaulin up, tools away and back inside for a hot shower. All the while thanking the polite rain for not disturbing me halfway through the port side, and for not letting me get well started on the starboard.
Incidentally, one very handy tool for boat back garden building is a Garden Kneeling Pad. Basically a piece of durable foam with a built in handle that's just right for kneeling on. Kneel in the cold wet mud, or hard concrete for a while and trimming those last two notches is a whole lot less fun. Get one for feck all + postage on ebay.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Looks like a Boat

Here you can see it's starting to come together. Both of the sheer clamps are fully fitted, Next is the glue up. The eagle eyed amongst you will notice that the frame for the cover is inside the chine between the first and second frames (from the pointy end). This will require some "rework" on my canopy frame.

As I mentioned before, twisting oak requires a little bit of leverage. I've swapped in the shorter clamps as the wood has already taken on a fair twist from when I steamed it. This helps keep it all in place until I can get the Screws and Glue in place.

And the pointy bit. The tape is to stop water getting in before I glue it up. 2 inch screws and big washers hold it all in place. A nice fit if I do say so myself.
Monday, February 16, 2009
A little more progress....
I can see the problem when I get to glassing and painting. It will require some "gentle" trimming of the bushes. My wife may not be happy.
It appears that the best way to actually attach the strake is to glue and screw it on at the front first, and then bend it into position. This way leverage works in your favour. In the absence of any friends who would be prepared to simply stand still, holding the end of a 16 foot "stick" for half an hour or so, I ended up just tying it off at the centre and the far end. This, after a little bit of adjusting (ok, a lot of adjusting) held the near end in place for me to drill and screw. I wish I had pictures, but by the time I was finished, It was dark, and I was tired and there was kids (and wives) to be fed.
Fuller bits rock, but they are fragile. Fortunately the one that snapped off had gone in far enough to protrude out the far side, making removing the broken bit a whole lot easier. You can't really leave the broken bit in. Steel and Oak are poor bedfellows. Acid and all that. It was (of course) my fault that it snapped, trying to squeeze the drill in where it just won't fit means it puts a whole lot of bending force on the drill bit. That only ever ends one way.
Next up is the glue up. Then the fairing, then I start with the skin....
Sunday, February 01, 2009
Sheer Strake Notches
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Wooden it be nice....
I got all dressed down in my old clothes and overalls, unwrapped the boat.
I took out a few saws and markers to have a go at some of the remaining sheer strake notches.
Then I noticed a small spot on my glasses. The another. Then I felt one on my nose.
I could suddenly hear the pitter patter of tiny rain drops on the Poly Tarp.
Just like that, overcast became raining, and I had to cover over the boat and gear down.
Building a boat outdoors is a nice idea. But Rain is a dismal reality.
Oh well there's always next week.
Work has deadlines, My Maths degree has deadlines, The boat will just get done.
At least the hired help still shows up on time....

Monday, January 12, 2009
PMF 180 Rocks
I added the twist to the second sheer strake. More cord, more truckers hitches and more clamps.
Then I started cutting the notches for the first sheer strake.
I really didn't fancy trying to chisel upwards, so I got out a blue marker pen, marked off the run of the sheer strake at each frame and then got out a mirror and the PMF 180.
It Rocks. It's not a precision instrument. This is not the thing to used for visible dovetails. But to cut a notch for sheer strake that will be epoxied and screwed into place, happy days.
You can set the blade at any angle to make it easier to get at things. It's noisy though, even through ear muffs.
I got all bar one frames sorted on the first side. Next weekend should see both sheer strakes ready to be glued and screwed into place.
Decking screws to draw it all tight and to be replaced by bronze later.
Saturday, January 03, 2009
Sheer Madness
Once they were clamped in place, it gave the sheers something to rest on while I clamped it all up. You can see these more clearly in the second picture.
Now that they are steamed into place, and with the help of towels, boiling water, clamps and a truckers hitch, I am twisting them a little to follow the line of the frames. To avoid the clamps damaging the sheer strakes, I clamped a cutoff either side and then twisted. With the leverage of the long bar clamps, and the 3:1 advantage of the truckers hitch (poor mans pulley) you do have to go slowly and carefully to avoid that snapping sound. I hate that snapping sound.
It's really starting to look like a boat now. I can see the shape of it.
I need to bevel each of the notches and then glue and screw. I have a Bosch PMF 180 (Fein multimaster clone) and it happily cuts oak. I suspect this will be easier than trying to lie under the frame and hit a chisel upwards.