Sand-o-rama

Sneak preview. The last couple days have been a sandorama. I got the stems installed and shaped to match the hull and then I started wearing out sheets of sandpaper. When the hull split in multiple places in the process of getting it off of the form I glued them all back together and that left a lot of glue residue on the hull. I had already sanded the hull smooth but the dried glue caused me to have to go back over the whole thing. That plus shaping the stems made for a lot of hours of sanding.

I ordered the 6 oz. cloth this week and I will be able to take advantage of the warm weather we're having and get the cloth on the hull soon. When you wet out the cloth with resin there is a push and pull between the cloth and the wood for the resin. If the balance isn't right you can end up with a weak spot or a light colored blemish in the finish. I coat the hull in advance and sand that coat smooth before I drape the cloth on the hull. Then all of the resin that I brush onto the cloth is used by the cloth.

"Canoe Mike" Thomsen

Michael Thomsen of Tecumseh, Michigan built his first canoe because he wanted a small, easily handled boat to fish from. It turned out so nice he knew he had to build more. “Canoe Mike” has now retired from his day job as an electrician and devotes all his time to building boats and paddles. He makes wooden canoes using the wood strip and fiberglass method. He buys the caned seats and brass hardware for the boats, but hand makes all the other components of the boat. He also makes wooden canoe and kayak paddles.

https://www.facebook.com/thomsenboats
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Hanging the Fiberglass Cloth

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It's That Time Again