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Designing, Building, Operation and Discussion of Model Ships and Boats
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Current Activity

- The Dauntless Project has been on hold as I stumbled between other major projects trying to to solve a late-in-life crisis. Being over the "standard" retirement age but still working, I was searching for an Idea on how to turn a hobby into a profitable business. Building a model boat didn't qualify.
- My primary employer "retired" me in early 2015 so now I have time to pursue other projects of interest.

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The Dauntless

This is the Primary Category for the Dauntless construction.

A Little Progress – Dec 2011

I did some work on the hull this weekend. Not much as all I did was get the keel glued to all the bulkheads (frames). I tried to form the chine stringer at the chine line to conform to the bow curved section but the spruce wood is too hard and stiff to bend properly. One of the hazards of kit wood.

Each chine strip is actually two pieces of 1/4 x 1/4 square spruce, angle spliced to make it long enough.

I actually broke the splice joint when I tried to see if the short end (after the splice) would bend more than the longer end. That put a lot of tension on the splice and it failed. Mostly a glue failure but some wood. That means the splice wasn’t all that good anyway. I never would have found it and it wouldn’t have been a critical joint near the mid section anyway, but now I get to do a “do over”. I probably squeezed too much epoxy out of the original joint.

Basic Hull Glue-up

The hull formation has begun. The last post was a dry fit. This one has the epoxy doing its thing. I had an idea to keep the chine flat to the board. I used an office stapler in the open position and actually stapled the chines down to the work board. Just enough penetration to give a good flat hold without any pins in the way.

I was also using some weights from time to time. You can see them in the pictures. The round silvery ones are 303 stainless steel blanks I use to machine locomotive wheels (2 per blank). Nice heavy hold down weights.

FYI epoxy glue doesn’t require tight holding to do a proper job. In fact light or no pressure is preferable. I little fillet is good practice. These fillets are a little large but they will be hidden under the deck so I was a bit generous. Epoxy is designed to be a gap filler too and the Dumas slots need a lot of filling. The slots are a bit oversize from the die crunching.

The keel isn’t glued in yet and that will be the next step.

Dauntless Build Started

The very first step of the Dauntless construction is shown. I used some 5 minute epoxy to splice glue the keel pieces and the sheers.

The flat building board is finished with three coats of polyurethane. The door looks almost too good to build upon.

The keel hasn’t been laminated yet and I have ordered some 30 minute epoxy with which I will do the lamination. I also ordered some System3 T- 88 epoxy that I will use when I need a slow setting epoxy. I am always fixing things with epoxy and this stuff has been around for along time, originally designed for boat builders.

I discovered the System3 T- 88 is recomended to only be used as an adheasive. because of its thickness it is not recomended for sealing wood or laminating fiberglass. For surface coating System3 recomends several other lower viscosity clear finish products in the end use chart.  I will consider those coatings that can also be used when I cover the hull and other surfaces with 2 oz fiberglass.

I laid the keel haves side by side to illustrate the curve of the hull. Epoxy will be applied on the top surfaces seen here and then joined together to make a thicker keel.

Door Building Board

I now have my building board. As you can see in the pictures I purchased a 24 inch by 80 inch flush door. I ended up getting it at Home Depot after Lowes didn’t have ANY 24 inch in stock. No problem, they are close to each other.

It cost $24.00 and with tax it ended up two cents shy of $26.00. That’s not a bad investment for a flat place to build a large model boat.

The floor clerk cut 20” off the door. He volunteered to do it for me after I told him I was building a large model boat. I said, “That would be great as you’ll do a straighter cut with your panel saw than I could do at home.”  Also the door in two pieces would fit into my VW GTI much easier. It probably took him less than two minutes to safely make the single cut.

Now I have two flat surface building boards. The large one is 60 inches by 24 inches and the smaller board is 20 inches by 24 inches. I won’t count the saw kerf as missing OAL.

As you can see I made and glued in new end supports in both door pieces. I had to dig the mighty Powermatic out of its hiding place to do the sawing. The thickness of the end wood is 1 and 1/8 inch. The insert width can be anything. The large piece I was able to make 1 and 1/4 inch wide. The small piece I could only scrounge up a 3/4 inch piece. Both will do the job just fine. Overall length of both pieces was 22 and 1/4 inches. That makes the stock wood sides only 7/8 deep each.

That material seen inside the door shell is just cardboard. With the sharp wood chisel seen in the photo it took all of 3 minutes to prepare space for the new end wood piece. For the primeval forest tree huggers, that is not real Lauan wood. It is a pressed fiber like paper with somehow receiving a super thin coating on the outside to make it look like wood. I am sure it is an ecologically sound material.

I choose Type III Titebond glue but I do have an equal amount of Type II here in the shop. Either would work fine. I coated both surfaces before making the joint. Now I am pealing Titebond skin off my fingers just like my model airplane days (or woodworking).

Oh and as usual, one can’t have enough clamps on hand.

A once over with the sandpaper block and the door/boards look like they were always that short. I am thinking I should give the building boards a coat of urethane just as a moisture (humidity) protection. Then on with the project build.

Slow Start

I am writing in LibreOffice Writer, a component of Fedora Linux. The office program seems to be much the same as the OpenOffice.Org which is written in Java and now sponsored by Oracle. Looks like Linux is getting more commercial than they claim. Oh well, it seems to be very similar and functional.

I have Fedora installed on one of the shop computers and in the shop is where I have been all day (so far). The weather is so nice that I hate being in the house with so much that can be done here. It has been raining off and on for several nights so the yard is at last getting well refreshed but not ready for a cutting.

It’s nice to have a comfortable workshop again. I haven’t started the build on the Dauntless but it is getting close. The project is a hobby, not a business so things like a daughter getting married move to first in the line. That event just ended with a hitch and in this case that is a good thing.

I have been looking for an 18” hollow core door panel for a boat building surface. It is one panel of a bi-fold closet door. I don’t have time of the energy to haunt scrap yards as I can buy a new 24” single door for under $30.00. I am about to go do that. Too wide is OK.

First job will be to cut down the length to make it more manageable. I figure about 20- 24 inches removed should do it. That operation will probably be the next post.