stringers

  • Hull Ends

    Hull Ends

    Oh god, at the end of every work day when we are high-fiving each other, we are always marveling at just how much more boatlike the boat looks. But today, for reals, at the end of the work day, the boat doesn’t just look boatlike — technically if you dropped it in the water, it…

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  • Sheeting the Hull

    Sheeting the Hull

    It looks easy, right?  What could go wrong?  Four rectangular sheets of plywood lined up together on a horizontal surface made to fit them, screwed down on all the edges. But as soon as we started sheeting the bottom of the boat, we realized this seemingly simple task would be more complicated.  How do we…

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  • Correcting Mistakes II: The Usefulness of Square Corners

    Correcting Mistakes II: The Usefulness of Square Corners

    When we went to put sheets of plywood on the top, er, bottom of the boat hull, they didn’t really line up.  WTF?  It seemed unlikely that four sheets of plywood were manufactured not quite square, so we had to look elsewhere. When we assembled the stringers with the cross beams, we had squared the…

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  • Correcting Mistakes I

    Correcting Mistakes I

    Today, the chickens come home to roost.  Remember that pesky three degree error?  As we assembled each of the stringers, we could see that the pieces didn’t come together quite right.  It would have been laborious but simple enough to cut new ones, but oh no.  I figured I could just cheat the difference on…

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  • Cross beams

    Cross beams

    This was an exciting day because for the first time, the boat was one piece.  Not just a pile of lumber.  Not just a bunch of stringers.  But one single solid piece that was even boat shaped.  More or less. Earlier when we were making the pieces for the stringers we trimmed a bunch of…

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  • Side Stringers

    Side Stringers

    The side stringers are the sides of the boat.  So far everything we’ve been doing was stuff inside; here we finally tackle something that will ultimately keep water out.  Yikes!  And because of the complexity of the build and our boat-tardedness,  it took us about seven hours per side to assemble. In our last build…

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  • Keel and Skeg Stringers

    Keel and Skeg Stringers

    It most conventionally built wooden boats, the frames refer to what you might think of as the “ribs” of the boat running across ways (that’s “athwartship,” to you, matey!).  In the Glen-L Waterlodge, the framing members run longitudinally and are called stringers. So building the boat frame means assembling the individual stringers and then tying…

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