Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Deck coming up
Yesterday was productive, and I even finished my taxes yesterday. I'm getting much more efficient. Today I am hoping to be productive, too.
Monday, April 18, 2011
More bottom
The two strips down the middle of the bottom were the hardest to prepare. The other hardest spot is the little ones closing in the gap. I actually steamed one of the strips to get it to bend.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Getting close to the bottom
It's difficult getting some of these strips on! I'm getting close to the bottom part though, then I'll get to work on the deck. I'm getting better but it takes a lot of my patience.
The hard part is getting the strip to twist and getting it to lay against the forms. Even when using staples and/or a finish nail it is hard to get it to go in place. When you think you've got one spot secure and you go to work down the rest of the strip the beginning spot will come undone!
Thursday, April 7, 2011
April 07 - 7 Strips
I got a late start today, but I'm planning on getting quite a bit done. I'm hoping the speed will pick up too. =)
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
April 06 - 4 Strips On
The sheer line strips were the toughest. I managed to get them to follow the sharp curve at the ends. While putting on the next strips the first ones kept popping out, that was pretty frustrating. I substituted this afternoon at the alternative school. I managed to get something done though. I will try to do two more tonight, I've got a social event though first.
Long Time A Comin'
I've finally finished all the prep work and have begun putting the kayak together. Lots of things had to be done before I even started building the kayak.
At Dan's house I borrowed some of his tools and he helped me get set up. I cut the planks into 3/8" strips on the table saw.
Then, Dan and I were running the strips through the planer and it broke, the rollers were jammed and nothing was getting through. So I took it in hopes of fixing it.
The strips sat awhile. I took the planer apart, found the broken sprocket, it looked porous so I thought I'd give it a shot and super-glue it. One board went through, but then it broke on the second one. Online the specific sprocket was back-ordered till April. A couple weeks went by and my friend Greg, a construction professor over at UAS, offered to help and said I could use the planer at the university. Three days of planing in between 3:30 and 5:00 pm then I had 192 1/4" thick Western Red Cedar strips at twelve feet long and 3/4" wide.
The next step was to put a bead and cove on them.
I had my router bits all ready.
So with the router bits, and thanks to Uncle Doug - a nice router, and thanks to Dan - a router table, and two days of full-on routering my strips were ready.
The two sheer strips went on the other day. Now I finally feel like the kayak is being built. I'm going to post a picture everyday to show progress because hopefully it goes really quickly now.
In this post I would like to thank Karen for the place to work, Doug for the router, Dan for the use of the table saw, router table, planer, help with doing some of the work and a couple of tools that I borrowed, Jasper for the tools I've borrowed, and Greg for letting me use the planer at the university and help transporting the strips.
At Dan's house I borrowed some of his tools and he helped me get set up. I cut the planks into 3/8" strips on the table saw.
Then, Dan and I were running the strips through the planer and it broke, the rollers were jammed and nothing was getting through. So I took it in hopes of fixing it.
The strips sat awhile. I took the planer apart, found the broken sprocket, it looked porous so I thought I'd give it a shot and super-glue it. One board went through, but then it broke on the second one. Online the specific sprocket was back-ordered till April. A couple weeks went by and my friend Greg, a construction professor over at UAS, offered to help and said I could use the planer at the university. Three days of planing in between 3:30 and 5:00 pm then I had 192 1/4" thick Western Red Cedar strips at twelve feet long and 3/4" wide.
The next step was to put a bead and cove on them.
I had my router bits all ready.
So with the router bits, and thanks to Uncle Doug - a nice router, and thanks to Dan - a router table, and two days of full-on routering my strips were ready.
This is the router table setup. The featherboards make the job very easy. The strip has no way to stray or kick-back.
Then I had a few things to do to get the forms lined up and secured. And there's tape that goes around any spot where glue might adhere the strips to the forms. You don't want it to be too difficult to get the kayak and the forms separated.Getting everything lined up properly proved to be much more difficult than I anticipated also.
The two sheer strips went on the other day. Now I finally feel like the kayak is being built. I'm going to post a picture everyday to show progress because hopefully it goes really quickly now.
In this post I would like to thank Karen for the place to work, Doug for the router, Dan for the use of the table saw, router table, planer, help with doing some of the work and a couple of tools that I borrowed, Jasper for the tools I've borrowed, and Greg for letting me use the planer at the university and help transporting the strips.
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