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.

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It's That Time Again

It's that time again. I pulled out some planes to shape the boat stems and was reminded that they need to be sharpened every so often. This is my sharpening kit; a combination diamond steel 400/600 grit, a 1200 grit King water stone, a combination water stone 3000 and 8000 grit and a leather strop that Martin gifted me. I use a Veritas honing guide to hold the blades while sharpening. Buddy Luke laughs at me for using the guide, says a real craftsman can sharpen blades without the use of a guide. I'm going to keep using the guide.

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You Can't Work All The Time

Well, you can't work all the time! When we moved to Michigan 24 years ago I had never gone ice fishing but I figured it was something that I was going to have to do. One of my first projects was to make this box to carry my stuff and it has worked fine all this time. Not shown is my hand powered auger which is already in the truck as we took it to the lake today to do some scouting.

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Sanding Epoxy Resin on Hull and Decks - Boring!

BORING! I haven't posted in awhile because I haven't done much more than sand, sand, sand on Dave boat #3. In my previous post I was sanding and putting a coat of polyurethane on the wooden gunwales and coamings. Since then I've been sanding the epoxy resin on the hull and decks. And sanding and sanding and sanding. I'm ready now to get a coat or two of the polyurethane on the rest of the boat in preparation for spraying the final coat on everything.

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Getting Ready to Finish the Wood

When the sanding is done I vacuum the wood and then wipe it down with a rag. I then make a tack rag with a blue paper towel ( they're supposedly lint free) and mineral spirits and wipe the wood again. Mineral spirits is the solvent for the polyurethane that I use as a base coat. I dilute the polyurethane with mineral spirits about 3 parts poly to 1 part thinner and put 1 coat of finish on all wood surfaces to enhance the grain of the wood.

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Sanding - done!

Sand, sand, sand. Take a break, drink some coffee and sand some more. With a random orbital sander I'll make one pass over the hull with 120 grit and then go back and do it again with 150 grit. I'll then vacuum everything and go over the entire hull by hand with 150 grit on a soft sanding pad. The last time around by hand will let me look for anything that I missed with the power sander. Getting closer. Sand, sand, sand.

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