SibLim update

  • 09 Mar 2020 03:12
    Reply # 8809698 on 4315719

    Annie those staunchion bases are not very good. I had big problems with rot under them. Though I think you have dealt with that likelihood efficiently. The triangular base is not particularly strong.


  • 27 Feb 2020 20:48
    Reply # 8776998 on 8769993

    Jim, you didn't actually need to do this.  One of the great things about these small,  pressure-from-under-the-lid, pressure cookers, is that you can buy some round-section rubber and glue a new gasket using contact adhesive. 
    Thanks for the tip. I have several opening portlights that need new gaskets. The gaskets are not available online.
    I bought a long length of shaped rubber gasket material and repaired one window already. But there is a wee gap at the top. Not to worry about but still.... 

    I'll will try your method with the others.

    Meanwhile, with a few clicks on eBay, I bought the gasket for the pressure cooker for CDN $5.00, including freight.

    Last modified: 29 Feb 2020 12:51 | Anonymous member
  • 26 Feb 2020 18:42
    Reply # 8773533 on 8771583
    David D wrote:

    Annie will you need to ballast these to stop them floating?

    Perhaps I can answer this, as designer.

    Because the boards contain air, but are also heavy, they will probably float about half-immersed - that would be ideal. What happens is this:

    When the boat is upright, the boards will drop part of the way, and then will need pulling down and securing with the downhaul.

    When the boat is beating to windward, needing first one and then the other board down, the windward board is dropped as soon as it is decided to tack. In fresh breezes, with the boat heeled, it will probably drop all the way, and will then simply need securing with the downhaul. As the tack proceeds, the pressure will come off the lee board, while it is still immersed, and then it can be quickly raised while the water is still carrying plenty of its weight. If this is left too long, the board is right out of the water, and more effort will be needed to raise it.

    All this needs some crew effort and good timing, so when short tacking, both boards can be left down (with some loss of windward efficiency).

    So you can see that this is rather a subjective matter (much like timing the tacking of a big genoa on a pointy-rig) - would you rather haul the board down against its floatation, or haul its entire weight out of the water, if you get the timing wrong? What I have advised Annie to do is "Wait and See" - conduct trials with the boards as they are built, and if they need a little ballast, it can be added, on the top or the bottom of the board. My feeling is that it won't be thought necessary, but time will tell.

  • 26 Feb 2020 15:47
    Reply # 8771583 on 8769997
    Deleted user
    Anonymous wrote:I have just updated my blog; the latest insallment can be found here.

    Annie you are so industrious.  Always impressed.

    Annie will you need to ballast these to stop them floating?

    Great work.

  • 26 Feb 2020 07:42
    Reply # 8770998 on 4315719
    Deleted user

    Looking good Annie. You talk about the 6 mm ply for the bilgeboards being difficult to bend and maybe you should have used 4 mm. I can let you know from my experiences making my tortured ply rudder blades that 4 mm ply can also be very difficult to bend!

  • 25 Feb 2020 20:30
    Reply # 8769997 on 4315719
    I have just updated my blog; the latest insallment can be found here.
    1 file
  • 25 Feb 2020 20:28
    Reply # 8769993 on 8732793
    Anonymous wrote:
      Jim wrote:I rescued this little pressure cooker from the recycling bin. It was missing a gasket which I found on Ebay. It fits very well in my Force Ten Sea-Swing stove. You can see clearly the oval shape of the lid and pot opening. It's about 5-1/4" deep by 6-1'4" wide.
    Jim, you didn't actually need to do this.  One of the great things about these small,  pressure-from-under-the-lid, pressure cookers, is that you can buy some round-section rubber and glue a new gasket using contact adhesive.  I have done it successfully on a couple of occasions.
  • 07 Feb 2020 17:11
    Reply # 8732793 on 8720829
    Anonymous wrote:
    David, have you ever come across those little pressure cookers with the lids that have to be slid on and then turned through 90 degrees to secure the handle and lid?  The lids are what I would term 'oval' although no doubt that is the incorrect geometric term.  


    I rescued this little pressure cooker from the recycling bin. It was missing a gasket which I found on Ebay. It fits very well in my Force Ten Sea-Swing stove. You can see clearly the oval shape of the lid and pot opening. It's about 5-1/4" deep by 6-1'4" wide.
    2 files
    Last modified: 07 Feb 2020 17:12 | Anonymous member
  • 05 Feb 2020 20:42
    Reply # 8729031 on 4315719

    Well, it was all very nice to bask in the glory and I like to be thought of as clever and creative, but I have to be honest: it was Alan (Zebedee), who voiced the idea a year or so ago.  I can only take credit for having remembered it.  :-\

  • 04 Feb 2020 13:02
    Reply # 8721033 on 8720733
    Deleted user
    Anonymous wrote:
    David D wrote:

    If I can ask them directly, does water get in thru the seal at the rotation rings when water washes past?

    I know Annie is a stickler for no water below.....but I wonder if the rotating seal is foolproof.  Hoping to hear from her experience here.

    I'm not entirely sure what you mean by this, but the only water that ever came donw Badger's companionway came through the opening of the pramhood, if it wasn't turned sufficiently away from the prevailing wind and spray.  The bubble was completely watertight: foam rubber on the underside, together with a lip over the ring and the over-centre hatches ensured this.  

    And again being a circular hatch I can't pass up a circular disk up thru it to close off externally.  I would have to have disk stored on deck on a lanyard, or a folding disk?
    David, have you ever come across those little pressure cookers with the lids that have to be slid on and then turned through 90 degrees to secure the handle and lid?  The lids are what I would term 'oval' although no doubt that is the incorrect geometric term.  To me, the obvious way to make a Hasler-type, clamp-down disc over the opening. would be to copy this idea.  You could then put it up from inside, turn it and clamp it down.  Personally, I don't see why you couldn't use over-centre catches for this, too.

    Annie this is excellent and illustrates exactly what I was hung up on.  How to pass a larger circle thru a smaller circle.  You can pass an oval thru an oval by rotating 90 degrees.

    And importantly the shape the hatches rest on doesn't have to match the circular shape of the pram hood mount.

    Thanks for the creative thinking.  My mum did have that type of pressure cooker.






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