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nom=de=plume October 3rd 09 12:06 AM

gift for teak work
 
I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing, but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck. Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.

--
Nom=de=Plume



Frogwatch October 3rd 09 01:13 AM

gift for teak work
 
On Oct 2, 7:06*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing, but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck. Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Nice gift. However, why would anybody in their right mind want
something like teak that takes so much work on a boat. This is even
worse for those in cold climes where sailing season is so limited.
They spend so much making their teak look nice they spend no time
sailing. Waste of time in my opinion. My old boat has some teak and
I put cetol on it and dont worry about the bungs. Who cares?

Richard Casady October 3rd 09 03:07 PM

gift for teak work
 
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 17:13:44 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

Nice gift. However, why would anybody in their right mind want
something like teak that takes so much work on a boat. This is even
worse for those in cold climes where sailing season is so limited.


All the passenger ships I have been on have a three inch thick teak
weather deck. They sand them once a year, and that is that.

Casady

Monkey Butler October 4th 09 12:54 AM

gift for teak work
 
On Oct 2, 7:06*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing, but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck. Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.

--
Nom=de=Plume


If they are made in China they will more than likely be unusabe. You
can get a nice set Anerican set from the woodenboatstore.com.

tiny October 4th 09 03:27 PM

gift for teak work
 
In article 99065618-558c-4c02-92c3-e68b3b637f51
@l13g2000yqb.googlegroups.com, says...

On Oct 2, 7:06*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing, but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck. Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.

--
Nom=de=Plume


Nice gift. However, why would anybody in their right mind want
something like teak that takes so much work on a boat. This is even
worse for those in cold climes where sailing season is so limited.
They spend so much making their teak look nice they spend no time
sailing. Waste of time in my opinion. My old boat has some teak and
I put cetol on it and dont worry about the bungs. Who cares?


Some folks like aesthetics, some focus on function only..

jps October 6th 09 04:39 AM

gift for teak work
 
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 16:06:55 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing, but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck. Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.


Not a single reference to bung hole?

Sounds like he'll appreciate the gift.

nom=de=plume October 6th 09 06:07 AM

gift for teak work
 
"jps" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 16:06:55 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:

I was trying to figure out a gift for my friend who's taking me sailing,
but
he seems to have everything. So, I talked to his wife who said he's got
"bung" work to do, so anything for doing deck repair would be fine (he's
got
every power tool imaginable, according to her). After some laughing and
her
saying, "really, that's what they're called," I googled this and it looks
like they're these small plugs of wood that cover up screws in the deck.
Why
don't they call them wood plugs??

I emailed his wife back and she said that he's been procrastinating
because
he doesn't have the right drill bit to countersink the holes (to remove
all
the old sealer, apparently), but didn't know exactly what size. Ok, so
that
seemed like a good gift. I went to a local hw store and found a 22pc set
of
"tapered" drill bits. It lists seven "Counter sinks" and seven "Depth
collars" - so I think I got the right thing.

Is deck teak considered a hard or soft wood? It seems to be a bit
contradictory from what I found. The bits supposedly work with either...
HW - 450 RPM and SW - 875, so it looks like as long as the drill is a
variable speed, which I'm assuming it is, then they should work with
either,
right?

It wasn't very expensive, and it came in a nice wood box.


Not a single reference to bung hole?

Sounds like he'll appreciate the gift.



Oh, there were references! He really enjoyed the gift, but can't really use
it for the project. His teak is held down witha different kind of bolt and
the countersink bits won't work for some reason.

It was a fun weekend. I just got back.


--
Nom=de=Plume




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