Beveling the Chine

A lot of work and effort has been put into getting the rabbet beveled properly with the angle of the frames. This will allow the bottom planks to lay flush along the rabbet and the frames, forming a strong and well sealed bottom that will keep water out, keeping us dry as the dinghy floats.

The chine lays opposite to the keel, and needs to be beveled in the same angle as the rabbet and frames. This is because the bottom planks will lay over the topside planks and extend outward. Once the bottom is planked, these overhanging ends will be cut to size and sanded flush with the curvature of the hull. The bevel also increases the width of the bedding compound which will promote further sealing. The added width gives yet another advantage: space for fasteners. The chine is a mere half inch wide, and the planks are a mere 1/4 inch wide. This all adds up to form a 1 inch width to fasten the bottom planks. Adding a bevel greatly increases this width, especially in the forward part of the boat where the angle is quite severe, creating what looks more like a scarf instead of a beveled junction.

A wooden batten is very convenient to verify the trueness of the bottom. The batten starts on the keel in the rabbet, and then passes flush over the frame and over the chine. The batten should lay flush and flat along the entire journey. If there are any gaps, then you will need to bevel the chine a bit further since the rabbet was beveled to perfection before the topsides were planked.

Beveling this much wood may seem like a tricky task. If the hull were carvel planked, we could use a block plane to bevel the chine since grain would all be oriented in the same direction. Since we did double diagonal planking on the topsides, the chine experiences three different grain directions and attempting to use a plane would result in a chipped up mess! Instead, abrasives are needed to smooth everything up.

A sander works for this task, but it is rather slow and time consuming. A much faster method is to use an angle grinder fitted with a paddle sander wheel. This attachment is practically a book of sandpaper that spins around as it blows the wood away in record speed. The angle grinder also has a long handle that allows you to better visualize the angle you are grinding the chine into. 

Using the angle grinder and double checking your work over and over will ensure that the chine is beveled flat and flush with the bottom planking. This will create a very strong and fair bottom that will glide through the water with ease.

Keeping Fasteners on a Boat

They say cruising is fixing your yacht in remote locations!

In order to fix your yacht, you need to carry parts for the repairs. Parts need to be fastened, so you need to carry an assortment of fasteners on board. Cruising boats will heel and pitch as they move through a seaway, and your fasteners will do the same inside their containers. If you don't keep them individually organized, you may end up with a jumbled mess of fasteners that are so scrambled that you will never be able to find the right fastener for the job!

If you buy fasteners in bulk, they come in nifty plastic containers that are well labeled and stack neatly. This keeps them all organized and separated in their own container, ready to be used when needed. The only problem is these containers do not offer any way of resealing them after they have been opened. As always, there is a trick to it!

Keeping the plastic label intact, the package will stay sealed, but you can still lift the lid a bit and bow the bottom out just a smidge to pour out a number of screws. Any screws you don't use in your project can be easily returned to the package in the same manner.

Now you can keep your fasteners organized and stored on your boat for when you need to do some random project with no access to a hardware store!

Magical Butt Fluff

The tiny corgi presents many bind blowing qualities. It has short and tiny legs, yet it can run quickly into your heart; it has short fur, yet it will shed relentlessly. Most magical of all would have to be the butt fluff.

When the wind blows at just the right angle, the magical butt fluff will be swept aside. 

Should your wind point fail you, having a corgi on board will put your mind at ease. If you wonder which direction the wind is coming from, simply look at the magical butt fluff to answer all your wind inquiries

If the wind is blowing from an angle, the butt fluff will be swept to the side. If the wind is dead astern, the butt fluff will be parted to form a powerful handlebar mustache.

Behold, the mighty mini corgi! 

Dinghy Planking

With the port side cleaned up and trimmed, it is time to get working on the starboard side. I have a system in place: I place the bedding compound, bang in a nail to hold the strake in place, and then drill and screw the rest of the plank. I also use two separate drills, one with the blade screw driver bit on it and the other with a small 1/16 inch pilot hole drill bit. 

Using the two drills saves me a lot of time that would have been spent switching bits out. Now I am able to power through the planking process with the experience of the other side under my belt!

All this speed meant that in two days, I was able to plank the entire starboard side of the hull.

The excess polysulfide bedding compound can be seen oozing out through the cracks in the boards. This lets me know that the bedding compound is spread all throughout the space between the planks, and the pressure in there was enough to squeeze the material out through the narrow gaps in the boards. What this is telling me is that I now have a watertight seal between the two layers.

With the starboard side planked, all I could do was wait for the polysulfide to cure so I could begin shaping and trimming the topsides.

The View

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I hear people talk about wanting a great view of the water, but they end up never looking out their windows. Living on the water makes you much more aware of the world you live in, especially when you have to walk through it to get to your boat. 

These are the gorgeous days that would have been missed by simply not looking out the window. Living aboard makes you observe this world and all of its splendors!  

As the sun sets and the colors grow warmer, the whole world around you looks more gorgeous and you are there to appreciate it. Everyday you are there, observing and enjoying the view as the sun sets in a vivid display of magical colors. Beholden by those living on boats, ignored by those cooped up in houses.