SHIP'S LOG:
More busy work today. Russ brought down all of the Cushions and helped me hoist them into the boat. I took the afternoon to set them all in place which is a lot easier with nothing in the boat.
Fred stopped by to schmooze. He brought the Honda Generator back which he repaired. But rather than hoist it up into the boat, we decided that it would be simpler to wait until Saturday when we could simple set it aboard from the dock.
As of 4;40pm. ABISHAG wasn't in and so we await tomorrow.
I locked my car keys in the car. So I asked josh if he could help me out. It was certainly a fool's errand but lo and behold, he has a complete "Jimmy kit!" What are the odds of that? He had never used it and it took awhile but eventually , actually less than 10 minuets, the P.O.S. was open again.
I haul a load of stuff from Russ' basement tomorrow and hopefully ABISHAG will get splashed.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Getting Closer!
SHIP'S LOG:
Well, all the electronics re in. It was not a "plug & play" proposition as there was perhaps a hand's width of space behind the SSB meaning I hand to make all of those connections without actually seeing them, merely feeling my way along. The UHF radios were easier, cleaner and more accessible, but I had to concoct a new mount for the hatch-way radio as the old one broke off. Luckily, I had the mount from whatever device had been in place in the cockpit and with a "little" creative effort, produced a suitable mount. After both were in place, I decided that the mounts need to be switch as the "new" one was too intrusive in the hatch opening. It is a project for today. The two GPS units went in without a hitch but with no juice in the boat, there is no way to test any of this stuff.
I'll find out this morning when ABISHAG get dunked. I am hoping to take her down river on Saturday with Fred & Bob. Of course, she has to go into the water before that can happen and with all the "busy bees" hard at work this weekend in the yard, who knows what the waiting line will be like.
Well, all the electronics re in. It was not a "plug & play" proposition as there was perhaps a hand's width of space behind the SSB meaning I hand to make all of those connections without actually seeing them, merely feeling my way along. The UHF radios were easier, cleaner and more accessible, but I had to concoct a new mount for the hatch-way radio as the old one broke off. Luckily, I had the mount from whatever device had been in place in the cockpit and with a "little" creative effort, produced a suitable mount. After both were in place, I decided that the mounts need to be switch as the "new" one was too intrusive in the hatch opening. It is a project for today. The two GPS units went in without a hitch but with no juice in the boat, there is no way to test any of this stuff.
I'll find out this morning when ABISHAG get dunked. I am hoping to take her down river on Saturday with Fred & Bob. Of course, she has to go into the water before that can happen and with all the "busy bees" hard at work this weekend in the yard, who knows what the waiting line will be like.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
ABISHAG IS DONE!
SHIP'S LOG:
. . . .Well, sort of. I have done all the panels I can but despite three rolls of Velcro, I was able to put in place only 8 of the 9 panels. I simply ran out of Velcro. I also ran out of Marine Units, so the wood strips and more Velcro will have to await June and some ducats from the summer job at TYC. SIGH!
Actually, it works out pretty well. The problem is that the panels, even in their reduced state are still rather heavy. They are also warped which makes it difficult for the Velcro on the panels to make contact with the Velcro on the overhead. More had to be used but where it works it looks just fine and fulfills its intended purposes, that of making access to the underside of the deck easier.
I did paint the bottom. I hate that job and if, as old age advances, I have the yard to any of the work(at an exorbitant price I might add), it will be the first job I give them. There is no easy, simply, clean, tiring or pain-free way to do it. My back has decided to go on strike and every now and then, gives me a serious grab to remind me that i really am getting old.
Late last year, I closed the drawer that is in the saloon table and haven't been able yo get it open since. It is hung up on something but there is no way to find out what. Basically, it required dismantling the table. It turns out that the opening into which the draw slid allowed the drawer to be closed beyond the length that the builders intended. The "back wall" of the drawer slot had been knocked further back allowing the drawer to "hang up." Dismantling this back wall I found that the wood had softened a bit over the years due to the leak in the main hatch. Unscrewing the wall, re-gluing it, adding larger screws seems to have correct the problem. Evidently this was a long standing problem as there was a hole drilled into this wall. Inserting a dowel into the hole while tripping the latch allowed the drawer to be opened. Correcting the problem was not so much difficult as it was awkward. Getting out all the screws and the hardware for hold the table leaves in the open position, re-gluing the wood and screwing everything back together in the right order had to be accomplished bent like a pretzel. But it is done.
Done also was repositioning the latches that hold the table leaves in the closed position. All the slamming over the years had moved the catches and so they didn't engage. I repositioned them so that they could be adjusted from a normal sitting position and not some type of tortuous contort position. They work now which make the bungee cord arrangement no longer necessary. Huzzah!
The zinc is on, the toe rail is stained, ABISHAG has been cleaned inside and out, and she wants only a restoration of the items removed and she will be ready to got. Strangely, I have to work myself up to moving aboard and living on her again. This shift every six months or so gets to be a drag. I am tying to psyche myself up and it is not as easy as it sound. Of course, once I am there, I will wonder why I ever left.
. . . .Well, sort of. I have done all the panels I can but despite three rolls of Velcro, I was able to put in place only 8 of the 9 panels. I simply ran out of Velcro. I also ran out of Marine Units, so the wood strips and more Velcro will have to await June and some ducats from the summer job at TYC. SIGH!
Actually, it works out pretty well. The problem is that the panels, even in their reduced state are still rather heavy. They are also warped which makes it difficult for the Velcro on the panels to make contact with the Velcro on the overhead. More had to be used but where it works it looks just fine and fulfills its intended purposes, that of making access to the underside of the deck easier.
I did paint the bottom. I hate that job and if, as old age advances, I have the yard to any of the work(at an exorbitant price I might add), it will be the first job I give them. There is no easy, simply, clean, tiring or pain-free way to do it. My back has decided to go on strike and every now and then, gives me a serious grab to remind me that i really am getting old.
Late last year, I closed the drawer that is in the saloon table and haven't been able yo get it open since. It is hung up on something but there is no way to find out what. Basically, it required dismantling the table. It turns out that the opening into which the draw slid allowed the drawer to be closed beyond the length that the builders intended. The "back wall" of the drawer slot had been knocked further back allowing the drawer to "hang up." Dismantling this back wall I found that the wood had softened a bit over the years due to the leak in the main hatch. Unscrewing the wall, re-gluing it, adding larger screws seems to have correct the problem. Evidently this was a long standing problem as there was a hole drilled into this wall. Inserting a dowel into the hole while tripping the latch allowed the drawer to be opened. Correcting the problem was not so much difficult as it was awkward. Getting out all the screws and the hardware for hold the table leaves in the open position, re-gluing the wood and screwing everything back together in the right order had to be accomplished bent like a pretzel. But it is done.
Done also was repositioning the latches that hold the table leaves in the closed position. All the slamming over the years had moved the catches and so they didn't engage. I repositioned them so that they could be adjusted from a normal sitting position and not some type of tortuous contort position. They work now which make the bungee cord arrangement no longer necessary. Huzzah!
The zinc is on, the toe rail is stained, ABISHAG has been cleaned inside and out, and she wants only a restoration of the items removed and she will be ready to got. Strangely, I have to work myself up to moving aboard and living on her again. This shift every six months or so gets to be a drag. I am tying to psyche myself up and it is not as easy as it sound. Of course, once I am there, I will wonder why I ever left.
Monday, May 12, 2014
Getting close
SHIP'S LOG:
Things are progressing nicely, though I did have to reseal the main hatch again.This time, rather than sealing just the outer edge, I did the inside as well. I test with a hose indicated that all was seal and there were no leaks. Huzzah!
All of the ceiling panels are down and cut to more manageable sizes. I had to fill all the screw holes and glue all the places where the Masonite was broken. Today's project for the ceiling panels is to finish filling the holes as I ran out of wood paste and then to paint them, or at least get started on the project. I will also do all the measuring so that I can buy the wood stripes necessary to hang them in place. It will be a real joy to get them in place and off the cabin floors.
I am hoping that I will be able to paint the bottom this weekend and handle any tasks and projects that need to be done on the hard. They are all basically small, though there are some that can be done in the water. Then it will be launching time.
Things are progressing nicely, though I did have to reseal the main hatch again.This time, rather than sealing just the outer edge, I did the inside as well. I test with a hose indicated that all was seal and there were no leaks. Huzzah!
All of the ceiling panels are down and cut to more manageable sizes. I had to fill all the screw holes and glue all the places where the Masonite was broken. Today's project for the ceiling panels is to finish filling the holes as I ran out of wood paste and then to paint them, or at least get started on the project. I will also do all the measuring so that I can buy the wood stripes necessary to hang them in place. It will be a real joy to get them in place and off the cabin floors.
I am hoping that I will be able to paint the bottom this weekend and handle any tasks and projects that need to be done on the hard. They are all basically small, though there are some that can be done in the water. Then it will be launching time.
Saturday, May 3, 2014
A Good Day Of Work
SHIP'S LOG:
After three days of rain, I finally got up to ABISHAG and there is both good news and bad news. First the Good News: the hatches in aft cabin and the fore cabin, both newly reset, are working just fie to keep out the rain. The Bad News, it would appear that the main hatch in the Saloon did not. Right under the main hatch is the saloon table. The has two leaves that drop when not in use an a central central space between them sporting fiddles (raised edges). When I got there yesterday, this raised area was awash, filled to overflowing with water. Evidently, the water is still getting in but exactly how I can't figure. The same procedure was use to seal it and reset it as was used for the other two hatches, so it would seem that it should be as tight as they. There was also indications (more water) that water reached as far as the port-side settee as there was water in the toolkit and a locker box that rested there. Unfortunately there was no linger clues as to where the water was making its entrance as the main hatch itself was dry as was the area around it. There didn't appear to be any leakage around the ports so I am at a total loss to explain it. It appears that I am going to have to resort to "the hose" - soaking down the deck around the hatch and see if I can spot how it is gaining entrance. Some good news for this procedure is that the ceiling tiles are all down so this procedure should make clear who it the water is getting in.
At little more bad news came in the form of the death of my Shop-Vac. I had left it sitting on the table in the saloon right under the hatch and water evidently dripped on it big time. On the top cover of the Shop-Vac, there is a vent for the cooling of the electric motor and as a result, water dripped into the vent and onto the motor and when I attempted to start it it shorted out and died. So it is that I had to purchase a new one. O joy!
I spent the first part of the work day cleaning up the effects of the leaks. The tools had to be WD-40-ed to keep them from rusting and the interior deck had to be cleaned as I tracked wet muddy feet all over. I had to pump out the bilge and the sump. When all that was done, I could get down to work.
The prop had to be cleaned of barnacles and dried out marine growth, which took about an hour with a wire-brush on the drill. Boy, once those little bastards adhere themselves to something they really don't make it easy to get them off. And you have to get them off as they really, and I mean really, affect the boat speed. A fouled prop can really make the engine work hard. In addition, they attract new barnacles and marine growth as they provide the perfect medium for new growth, so they have to go. I have to stand at an uncomfortable angle and manipulate the drill with the wire brush and literally burnish the prop free of all growth. When it is over, the prop looks great, all bright and shiny, but with in a couple of hours the moisture in the air causes it to dull completely. Still, it is free of the growth and that's the main thing.
The old shaft zinc had to be removed as well.It is about half way gone and so it has to be replaced. It is weird to toss out what looks like a barely used zinc but once it has "melted" away more than half way, it really doesn't provide the protection one needs. So if it is a choice between a $13 zinc and a $850 prop or a $1,000 prop shaft, it is $13 well spent.
Last summer, during a storm that took place while I was in a slip at the club, ABISHAG rubbed a rail against a protruding dock piling. It partially ripped out a section of the toe rail and it had to be replaced. I tried to pop the bungs with the intention of removing the screws that help it in place but I did too good a job setting it in place. This was one of the sections I had replaced last year and over-kill came into play, for while, after a lot of effort, I was able to get the bungs out and the screws exposed, the screws simple would not move no matter how much force was applied. In the end, I had to finish the job the piling started and ripped the section of the toe rail off. This revealed why the screws would move as they were bent out of true and so would unscrew. It also revealed that the epoxy base that I set them in pulled out as well. Once the toe-rail was off then, I has to fill the gaps with some marine filler The next step will be to sand it down, re-drill the holes and put in new screws. Of course, now I need to find the new screws, sand off the repair, put down an adhesive and them reset the rail. Ah the fun of boat ownership!
After three days of rain, I finally got up to ABISHAG and there is both good news and bad news. First the Good News: the hatches in aft cabin and the fore cabin, both newly reset, are working just fie to keep out the rain. The Bad News, it would appear that the main hatch in the Saloon did not. Right under the main hatch is the saloon table. The has two leaves that drop when not in use an a central central space between them sporting fiddles (raised edges). When I got there yesterday, this raised area was awash, filled to overflowing with water. Evidently, the water is still getting in but exactly how I can't figure. The same procedure was use to seal it and reset it as was used for the other two hatches, so it would seem that it should be as tight as they. There was also indications (more water) that water reached as far as the port-side settee as there was water in the toolkit and a locker box that rested there. Unfortunately there was no linger clues as to where the water was making its entrance as the main hatch itself was dry as was the area around it. There didn't appear to be any leakage around the ports so I am at a total loss to explain it. It appears that I am going to have to resort to "the hose" - soaking down the deck around the hatch and see if I can spot how it is gaining entrance. Some good news for this procedure is that the ceiling tiles are all down so this procedure should make clear who it the water is getting in.
At little more bad news came in the form of the death of my Shop-Vac. I had left it sitting on the table in the saloon right under the hatch and water evidently dripped on it big time. On the top cover of the Shop-Vac, there is a vent for the cooling of the electric motor and as a result, water dripped into the vent and onto the motor and when I attempted to start it it shorted out and died. So it is that I had to purchase a new one. O joy!
I spent the first part of the work day cleaning up the effects of the leaks. The tools had to be WD-40-ed to keep them from rusting and the interior deck had to be cleaned as I tracked wet muddy feet all over. I had to pump out the bilge and the sump. When all that was done, I could get down to work.
The prop had to be cleaned of barnacles and dried out marine growth, which took about an hour with a wire-brush on the drill. Boy, once those little bastards adhere themselves to something they really don't make it easy to get them off. And you have to get them off as they really, and I mean really, affect the boat speed. A fouled prop can really make the engine work hard. In addition, they attract new barnacles and marine growth as they provide the perfect medium for new growth, so they have to go. I have to stand at an uncomfortable angle and manipulate the drill with the wire brush and literally burnish the prop free of all growth. When it is over, the prop looks great, all bright and shiny, but with in a couple of hours the moisture in the air causes it to dull completely. Still, it is free of the growth and that's the main thing.
The old shaft zinc had to be removed as well.It is about half way gone and so it has to be replaced. It is weird to toss out what looks like a barely used zinc but once it has "melted" away more than half way, it really doesn't provide the protection one needs. So if it is a choice between a $13 zinc and a $850 prop or a $1,000 prop shaft, it is $13 well spent.
Last summer, during a storm that took place while I was in a slip at the club, ABISHAG rubbed a rail against a protruding dock piling. It partially ripped out a section of the toe rail and it had to be replaced. I tried to pop the bungs with the intention of removing the screws that help it in place but I did too good a job setting it in place. This was one of the sections I had replaced last year and over-kill came into play, for while, after a lot of effort, I was able to get the bungs out and the screws exposed, the screws simple would not move no matter how much force was applied. In the end, I had to finish the job the piling started and ripped the section of the toe rail off. This revealed why the screws would move as they were bent out of true and so would unscrew. It also revealed that the epoxy base that I set them in pulled out as well. Once the toe-rail was off then, I has to fill the gaps with some marine filler The next step will be to sand it down, re-drill the holes and put in new screws. Of course, now I need to find the new screws, sand off the repair, put down an adhesive and them reset the rail. Ah the fun of boat ownership!
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
SHIP'S LOG:
Circumstances have conspired together to prevent me from getting up to ABISHAG for the last few days and so I have not had the chance to see if the hatches have leaked. Then again, it hasn't rained so that did not afford me the wetness to check it out. All things seem working for the good.
The house upon which I am sitting and on which I have been working is actually be cared for now by a pro. All of the effort to remove the kitchen floor proved only marginally helpful to the overall work. The care that was exercised in getting the linoleum and the mastic off without damaging the underfloor proved a lot of wasted effort in that the underfloor, unbeknownst to us had to be removed as well. It wasn't suitable for the cement that will be used for the tiles. The pro came in and stated that he would have just ripped it all up in one shot - linoleum, mastic & underfloor. Well, in any event it is all gone and he is currently laying in the cement board, actually screwing it in. Once it is in, he can begin to lay the tile and tomorrow, or after it is sufficiently dry, grout it. It should all be done by Thursday, indeed it has to be as he has another commitment beginning on Friday!
The rains have just started, though at this time it is really more spitting and sprinkles. By later in the day, it will be severe with a serious chance of flooding "in low lying areas - NOAA." Of course, most of the low-lying areas are already flooded and those that aren't are so wet, they can't take any more water. It should be over by Friday, so it will be back to the boat and the work then.
Circumstances have conspired together to prevent me from getting up to ABISHAG for the last few days and so I have not had the chance to see if the hatches have leaked. Then again, it hasn't rained so that did not afford me the wetness to check it out. All things seem working for the good.
The house upon which I am sitting and on which I have been working is actually be cared for now by a pro. All of the effort to remove the kitchen floor proved only marginally helpful to the overall work. The care that was exercised in getting the linoleum and the mastic off without damaging the underfloor proved a lot of wasted effort in that the underfloor, unbeknownst to us had to be removed as well. It wasn't suitable for the cement that will be used for the tiles. The pro came in and stated that he would have just ripped it all up in one shot - linoleum, mastic & underfloor. Well, in any event it is all gone and he is currently laying in the cement board, actually screwing it in. Once it is in, he can begin to lay the tile and tomorrow, or after it is sufficiently dry, grout it. It should all be done by Thursday, indeed it has to be as he has another commitment beginning on Friday!
The rains have just started, though at this time it is really more spitting and sprinkles. By later in the day, it will be severe with a serious chance of flooding "in low lying areas - NOAA." Of course, most of the low-lying areas are already flooded and those that aren't are so wet, they can't take any more water. It should be over by Friday, so it will be back to the boat and the work then.
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Hatches Are In!
SHIP'S LOG:
It took about 3 hours (1hr/hatch) to set the hatches in place. Not having done this before, I had only videos on YouTube to go on. It really seemed a rather simple process and really it was. You do it in a series of steps and it just goes. Not having worked with butyl caulking before, the first hatch was a real learning experience. It all seemed to go well, though the process disclosed that either the rear hatch is out of square or the aft deck where it is located is. I am not sure which but the butyl tape caulk should take care of the discrepancy. Of course the proof will come when next it rains, which it is doing right now. If the rain doesn't get in, all is well. If not, well I won't worry about it too much and simply re-do it.
It took about 3 hours (1hr/hatch) to set the hatches in place. Not having done this before, I had only videos on YouTube to go on. It really seemed a rather simple process and really it was. You do it in a series of steps and it just goes. Not having worked with butyl caulking before, the first hatch was a real learning experience. It all seemed to go well, though the process disclosed that either the rear hatch is out of square or the aft deck where it is located is. I am not sure which but the butyl tape caulk should take care of the discrepancy. Of course the proof will come when next it rains, which it is doing right now. If the rain doesn't get in, all is well. If not, well I won't worry about it too much and simply re-do it.
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