![]() |
Tracing a pattern?
I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info
on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks |
Tracing a pattern?
"Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard |
Tracing a pattern?
On Jan 7, 1:36*pm, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard Thanks |
Tracing a pattern?
On Jan 7, 10:36*am, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard Wilbur, This process is called "spilling" or at least it is on the west coast boat yards. Bob |
Tracing a pattern?
On Jan 8, 12:07*am, Bob wrote:
On Jan 7, 10:36*am, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Uncle Bob" wrote in message .... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard Wilbur, This process is called "spilling" or at least it is on the west coast boat yards. Bob I did a Google search for this and could not find anything about it. |
Tracing a pattern?
"Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... On Jan 8, 12:07 am, Bob wrote: On Jan 7, 10:36 am, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard Wilbur, This process is called "spilling" or at least it is on the west coast boat yards. Bob I did a Google search for this and could not find anything about it. That is because the spelling is wrong. Try 'spiling'. Only one 'l' |
Tracing a pattern?
"Bob" wrote in message ... On Jan 7, 10:36 am, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Uncle Bob" wrote in message ... I'm putting in a bulkhead in a gutted power boat. I'm looking for info on how to trace the curved surface of the hull vertically with the chines etc so I get a close fit with the bulkhead material. If anyone know any tips tricks or tutorials please let me know. Thanks Use cardboard. Make yourself a very large compass (not the direction finding kind but the kind that has a needle point on one side and a pencil on the other) Set up the cardboard far enough away from the sides of the boat you wish to trace and use the compass to scribe a line on the cardboard by following the sides of the hull chines and all. Wilbur Hubbard | Wilbur, This process is called "spilling" or at least it is on the | west coast boat yards. | Bob I added a partial (about half the beam) bulkhead to my fine bluewater cruiser and that is the way I figured out how to fit it to the shape of the interior where I put the bulkhead. The finish carpenters used this method but on a smaller scale with store-bought compasses to fit teak trim in the Irwin's when I worked there. I just scaled their method up. It worked great. My custom bulkhead fits like it came from the factory that way. Never heard the term "spilling." Wilbur Hubbard |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:34 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com