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Hi, Wilbur...
Sigh... "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message news.com... "Flying Pig" wrote in message ... Heh. It's currently preventing me from wearing myself out sanding out the initial fairing compound treatements on our hull. Methinks you are lazy, Skippy. Wet sanding is probably easier than dry sanding. It certainly is healthier as you don't breathe toxic dust. Get out there in your Speedo and get to work! All the boatyard gals will surely swoon! LOL! No boatyard gals around - it's storage season, so not even traffic in and out, for the most part. Those we HAVE seen are mostly geriatric, and, likely would, indeed, swoon - but as I look about like the storm troopers in Star Wars (white suit from head to toe, vapor and particulate mask and goggles), the speedo would be out of sight. Instead, while applying (no suit, etc.) there's a 40 year old pair of Sportif 4" inseam shorts, sacrificial to epoxy and, now, fairing compound (also epoxy, but very flexible). That (very little traffic) actually works well for us as we'll shortly want to hang in the slings for a bit to get at the bottom of the keel. The fairing of the indentations caused on the sides of the bottom of the keel went VERY nicely, and, so long as I get to it before it cures (5-7 days for full), it sands reasonably - but when green, like butter. I'll have some more pix of our progress up in a while, but we are making hay while the sun shines, so to speak, which was yesterday and for the next couple of days. I'm not all that fond of sanding with an electrical device in the rain :{)) This morning I motored WHAT!!?? Philistine! outside the harbor and anchored in the cleaner water in the bay to check out the condition of my new bottom paint that was applied in December. It was in great shape. No crusty stuff at all and just some brownish slime or stain that came right off using a dime-store, rubber-dot glove on my hand. And, STILL not a blister in sight. Not surprising - if you never had blisters, you'd likely not develop any at this late date. In our case, we didn't have any either - just some weep spots exposed by all that extra, unneeded, sanding. Of course, when I find a problem, I fix it, right (unlike some examples, fine for a pinch while under way, such as sticking some pipes inside a broken boom), during our infrequent refits, undoing the temporary repair if there was one, at the time. Thus, I chased any weep spots until there were no delaminations, and then made sure there wasn't any more WSM hiding to try to make a blister in the future. Given that the boat had been in the water for 4 years, the lack of visible blisters strongly suggests that we'll not see any, again, given the repairs (epoxy), fairing coat (epoxy) and barrier coat (epoxy) preventing the ingress of water to any which might remain. On which subject, the manager of the yard wandered over with her meter as we were taking a break yesterday. Meter barely budges everywhere she put it, whereas before, in most places it was mid range-to-pegged. Your bombast to the contrary :{)) - I believe we have this in hand. Regardless, this is the last time we'll address blisters during our ownership... Just a nice, clean, smooth bottom the likes of which an America's Cup boat would be proud of. I'd have been very upset to have seen any more than that - and, indeed, our bottom responded to just a deck brush, all the way to the end, 4 years after the application of our bottom paint, the wreck areas aside (which, of course, needed redoing, making that part only about 3 years old). And, the undercoat (duplicate applications in two colors) shed even more effectively than the top coat. So, we'll likely do the same thing this time around, since we don't know how long it will be before our next haulout. Once we have it all fair, we'll do a bit of fiberglassing on the leading and trailing edges of the keel, the bottom of the keel, and the very stern of the boat, over the rudder. Morgan 46s were built as split hulls, which made for much more effective layup, as every part of the layup was reachable - and they were laid up flat, having an assist from gravity. However, of necessity, the mating of the two parts involved some filler at the edges, before they were glassed over from the outside. A weak and unseamanlike design which put profit over function, I'm afraid. I sure would not feel very confortable in your boat in a survival storm at sea. I'd have ten times more faith in my little 27-footer that was popped out of a mold in one piece, especially as I have foamed her to have positive flotation. Heh. Easy to say on a bathtub, as there's no part which would have been difficult to reach for layup. Top to bottom, it's over 11 feet on ours. And, after you lay up about an inch of added thickness from the inner joint, leading to a 3' wide piece of tape (so called only because it's a long strip of roving) at the top of the buildup, I believe that our hull is sound. As you rarely leave the dock (or anchorage/mooring, whichever it is) for more than a day or two, storage isn't much of an issue. Foam-filling certainly should help you stay afloat in the event of a disaster - but we've got our spaces filled with tools and supplies which allow us to stay out for well over a year between provisionings along with having every sort of spare necessary to meet the realities of aging parts needing attention. If you had that ability (not knowing what sort of stowage you had before all the foam), you wouldn't be able to walk inside that lovely home of yours. Out of curiosity, how'd you do the foam? Injection? Pour-in? Something else? Our hull-to-freezer section, I used a commercial 2-canister stuff, name currently unremembered, of some foam which was impervious to epoxy and water. That led to a minimum of 6" at the bottom to over 13" at the top. It's allowed our keel cooler, lauded in different parts a while ago, to continue to keep our cooling working despite not being in the water. At the moment, it's 9.9° and 32.8° in the freezer and reefer, and, at the heat of the day, with the sun on that side, the freezer will rise only a few degrees while the spillover fan keeps the reefer constant Snippage of remainder of masochistic tale! Wilbur Hubbard P.S. Send cards and letters (checks and money orders) to: Neal Warren PO Box 1015 Tavernier, Fl 33070 Thank-ee kindly Was/is Cecil, of the thousands of "notices" herein, your brother? I seem to recall a tale from Aragorn recounting something (without names) of that sort during an attempted dinghy sale. From that tale and description of Cut the Mustard, as compared to your recent postings, I'd say you're back on the water (sometimes - do you live aboard?) and having a great time, a very good thing. Y'all (wait - even the uneducated southerners only refer to plural persons that way, though I could fudge it and apply it to all the other readers - You) have a great day. Perhaps we'll share an anchorage some day... L8R Skip -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog and/or http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
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