SibLim update

  • 29 Sep 2019 08:47
    Reply # 7907542 on 4315719

     It's funny how large it looks until someone is sitting there.  However, my offshore instincts kept kicking in whenever I thought about the foot well, so I've ended up with a roomy after deck with lots of places to sit, but with a small well from which to steer.

    This is going to be an amazingly good cockpit for sailing in rough weather, when the water is coming at you horizontally, as well as in mild conditions and at anchor, when you want more all-round visibility. I like it.

  • 29 Sep 2019 08:37
    Reply # 7907541 on 4315719

     I've given a certain amount of thought to additional ventilation in the boat.  While the Air-only dorade that I fitted should be adequate most of the time, I am concerned that in winter, with the boat shut up against wind and rain and the fire lit, there won't be sufficient air coming into the boat.  I have added a sort of dorade arrangement within the deck box.  Under the locker top and well inboard, it would take a catastrophe for water to enter - and I would probably have more to worry about than a few litres of water in the lazarette at that stage.  I used skin fittings - the pipe is very strong and glues into place with epoxy.  I just put them in temporarily for the moment, to make it easier to paint out the lockers.

    Very good. I always intended to do that on Tystie, to ventilate the lazarette and reduce the amount of condensation in winter, but never got a Round Tuit.

  • 29 Sep 2019 06:21
    Reply # 7907513 on 4315719

    Your idea would be very sensible and practical, Arne.  There doesn't generally seem to be enough thought given to either comfort or access around the cockpit area and all too many of them end up with the gear in the lockers being wet: if not from salt water, then from condensation.  I am hoping the the significant slope in my cockpit will discourage water from hanging about!

    I have done a bit more to it now, which you can see in my latest blog.  My visitors are starting finally to make sense of it all!


  • 10 Sep 2019 21:13
    Reply # 7874090 on 4315719
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    A+, yes, I stand corrected...

    A.

  • 10 Sep 2019 21:05
    Reply # 7874084 on 4315719

    Nothing new under the sun, Arne! You're pretty much describing the way Tystie's cockpit was made.

    [EDIT: for the first part, anyway, the hullside to hullside cockpit sole.]

    A+, I think, for the attention to detail and finish.

    Last modified: 11 Sep 2019 12:48 | Anonymous member
  • 10 Sep 2019 20:40
    Reply # 7874045 on 4315719
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Cockpit for dummies.

    What I write now is not meant for Annie. She certainly deserves an ‘A’ in carpentry, and needs no help.

    However, I once had to rebuild the cockpit of a 26’ clinker-built boat after having gutted her and replaced the nails and frames. I felt lucky that the cockpit was not to be self-draining, so making the hatches was not such a big deal  -  well within my wood-butcher capabilities.

    Only when toying with designing a garvey-style (3-plank plywood) boat with 7-metre waterline, did I spend some calories ponding on how to make a self-draining cockpit. I concluded that the easiest would be to first make a wall-to-wall cockpit floor, that is, from hullside to hullside. It would be given a 2-4° aft slope for self-draining and be high enough for both safe self-draining and some access under it from the cabin (as in Annie’s SibLim).

    The cockpit benches should be made as closed chests, one or two on each side. They would have to be secured with bolts or lashes to the cockpit floor, and have a couple of drain holes which could be closed.

    This setup would only have one disadvantage over a normal cockpit locker: It would weigh a bit more.

    On the other hand, there would be some advantages.

    ·         No water leaking into the lockers would end up inside the boat.

    ·         The lockers would not be very deep.

    ·         One could easily alter the benches/chests, making the footwell narrower or wider, or the benches higher or lower, without wrecking the whole cockpit in the process.

    The resulting dry interior, easy construction and flexibility with respect to changes, looked very attractive to me.

    From my armchair,
    Arne


    Last modified: 11 Sep 2019 09:10 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 09 Sep 2019 21:52
    Reply # 7872149 on 7870024
    Len wrote:

    A new post... the cockpit looks ... like it was made to be inside. It extends the cabin to the whole length of the boat. Very good.

    Oops!  I forgot to mention it here.

    In fact, Len, most of what you are seeing is the storage under the cockpit.  Even a hobbit such as I will have issues getting right aft there.  However, it does mean that stuff is kept dry and it also eliminates those terrible cockpit lockers that are so deep you are likely to get trapped in them.

  • 08 Sep 2019 17:41
    Reply # 7870024 on 4315719

    A new post... the cockpit looks ... like it was made to be inside. It extends the cabin to the whole length of the boat. Very good.

  • 26 Aug 2019 23:52
    Reply # 7850610 on 4315719

    Hi Annie!


    SibLim is looking fantastic!!! Coming along nicely!

  • 26 Aug 2019 01:40
    Reply # 7848643 on 4315719

    The new photos look wonderful – lots to see :-) Thanks for posting!

       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
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