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Nav station pad/cover
Hi all,
What is the common wisdom on solving the problem of - when navigating, my dividers - which are damn sharp - will poke through 2 or 3 layers of charts and poke into the surface of the nav station table. I'd love to put something down to stop this, but what is the best thing? any ideas would be appreciated so I don't have to reinvent the wheel here. Thanks, Mike. |
Nav station pad/cover
I recommend Chart Table Linoleum. Available at drafting supply centers.
If your 'on the cheap' (like me) find a piece of regular linoleum and to avoid the normal embossed pattern, turn it over and you will have a unglazed mat surface. -- My experience and opinion, FWIW -- Steve s/v Good Intentions "beaufortnc" wrote in message ups.com... Hi all, What is the common wisdom on solving the problem of - when navigating, my dividers - which are damn sharp - will poke through 2 or 3 layers of charts and poke into the surface of the nav station table. I'd love to put something down to stop this, but what is the best thing? any ideas would be appreciated so I don't have to reinvent the wheel here. Thanks, Mike. |
Nav station pad/cover
When I built my own chart table, I started out with the linoleum-like
material that is used on drafting tables. It would be ideal except that it expands and shrinks in dimensions with heat. So if the sun is shining in the doghouse window onto the chart table the material expands and wrinkles. What I ended up with was leather. I went to a leather store - Tandy's - and bought a large enough piece of skin to cover the chart table. I turned it over and used a regular old woodworking plane, honed sharp, to shave it to a consistent thickness, and then placed it in a shallow recess on the chart table, surrounded by a teak frame. Contact cement holds it down. Works great. HTH, Tom Dacon "beaufortnc" wrote in message ups.com... Hi all, What is the common wisdom on solving the problem of - when navigating, my dividers - which are damn sharp - will poke through 2 or 3 layers of charts and poke into the surface of the nav station table. I'd love to put something down to stop this, but what is the best thing? any ideas would be appreciated so I don't have to reinvent the wheel here. Thanks, Mike. |
Nav station pad/cover
beaufortnc wrote:
Hi all, What is the common wisdom on solving the problem of - when navigating, my dividers - which are damn sharp - will poke through 2 or 3 layers of charts and poke into the surface of the nav station table. I'd love to put something down to stop this, but what is the best thing? any ideas would be appreciated so I don't have to reinvent the wheel here. Thanks, Mike. 2mm thick self-adhesive Teflon sheeting. |
Nav station pad/cover
Hi Dennis,
Do you happen to know of a source online for the Teflon sheeting like you describe. I've looked, but haven't found anything quite like that. Thanks, Mike. |
Nav station pad/cover
On 10 Oct 2005 21:15:28 -0700, "beaufortnc"
wrote: Hi all, What is the common wisdom on solving the problem of - when navigating, my dividers - which are damn sharp - will poke through 2 or 3 layers of charts and poke into the surface of the nav station table. I'd love to put something down to stop this, but what is the best thing? any ideas would be appreciated so I don't have to reinvent the wheel here. Thanks, Mike. You can get self-healing cutting mat at hobby shops. Plastic model builders use them all the time for cutting out parts on. Might work for dividers? Mark E. Williams |
Nav station pad/cover
beaufortnc wrote:
Hi Dennis, Do you happen to know of a source online for the Teflon sheeting like you describe. I've looked, but haven't found anything quite like that. Thanks, Mike. Regrettably, I no longer have a contact. We used it at the factory I managed in the late nineties, but I am retired now and have lost all contacts. I have a feeling that modern sailmakers may use it for reinforcement, perhaps you should contact your local sail loft? Dennis. |
Nav station pad/cover
Thanks Tom, I had not thought about leather. You just got credit for helping
design Rutu. :-) I was planning to use vinyl drafting table cover but leather sounds a lot more elegant. Just have to watch out for coffee stains. When you get into low surface energy plastics like Teflon you start running into adhesive problems and paper charts tend to float on the surface and slide off. Leather is also less expensive than drafting table cover and a lot less than thick Teflon sheet. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Tom Dacon" wrote in message ... When I built my own chart table, I started out with the linoleum-like material that is used on drafting tables. It would be ideal except that it expands and shrinks in dimensions with heat. So if the sun is shining in the doghouse window onto the chart table the material expands and wrinkles. What I ended up with was leather. I went to a leather store - Tandy's - and bought a large enough piece of skin to cover the chart table. I turned it over and used a regular old woodworking plane, honed sharp, to shave it to a consistent thickness, and then placed it in a shallow recess on the chart table, surrounded by a teak frame. Contact cement holds it down. Works great. HTH, Tom Dacon |
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