Page 3 of 4

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 5:52 pm
by Dickie
Onka, I am planning on glassing the hull with a real pretty natural varnish. Thank you for the words of encouragement and I will be super carefule of the sanding, Thank you

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 9:33 pm
by Dickie
Everything laid out nice and purty. Moisture is making them bow out....
Image

Peanut butter like consistency??? :)
Image

Pumping iron......
Image

A nice smooth transitional seam....
Image

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Mon Oct 05, 2009 12:06 am
by LEE SCHNEIDERMANN
Nice looking build there Dickie. I'm going to tape painter's tape close to the seams of my 18' Freedom build to reduce the amount of "dookie schmutz" I have to sand back off on the exterior seams. It was pretty easy losing the top layer of laminate on my first build while sanding.
The $ and time spent taping would have added considerably to the look of the finished product. (ie; it would have "tidied" things up a bit) :oops:

Lee

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:55 am
by Oldsparkey
Take the time and tape the sides before filleting the seams. It is well worth it. Proper Preparation will save a lot of sweat, sanding and time.

I paint a strip of epoxy , on each side of the seam , when it cures a light ( very light sanding) and then the tape is put down leaving the width I want the fillet to cover over the seam. The run off is easy to clean up when it is on the tape , plus when the fillet starts to cure and you pull the tape you will have a nice crisp , sharp line.

The epoxy strip on the wood gives the tape something to hold onto and when it is pulled and there isn't any wood coming along with it. When filleting you can smooth the fillet out to the stage where no or very little sanding is required. Plus the epoxied surface on each side of the seam helps to protect the wood from the sandpaper.

Chuck.

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Mon Oct 05, 2009 10:40 am
by Dickie
Thanks for all the great advice. Have been real busy lately so not much done with it. Raining today so my plan is a day in the garage with the wood! I should have ready to stitch together in the next day or so. :mrgreen:

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Wed Oct 07, 2009 11:28 am
by Dickie
It actually looks like something!! Now maybe I can get some of the garage cleaned up and move it to the other side!

Image

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Thu Oct 08, 2009 9:32 am
by Bellybuster
lookin good Dickie, I have been away on a fishing trip so my boats are at a stand still. Did you use butt blocks or glass on your joints??
I am getting anxious to stitch mine together but I need the panels to mark out the second boat.

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Thu Oct 08, 2009 12:00 pm
by Dickie
I used glass. Am a little confused though, frame 2 is not looking right. It says it will end up about a quarter inch above side panel but when I hold side up to where it's supposed to be, it looks like it's an inch or so. Maybe it will line up better when its all stitched but have been holding off, measuring and re-measuring. All seems to fit. I don't know. Maybe it's just me.

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Thu Oct 08, 2009 4:39 pm
by jem
hmmm.... stitch it all up and see where it ends up then.

Re: Dickie's Laker in the making

Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2009 8:29 pm
by Bellybuster
I'm a little worried about my forms, they were cut from scraps so the measuring was not from edges of full sheets. Took some effort to wrap my brain around a few measures.
Lookin good so far, you're gettin way ahead of me