A 7 metre variant of SibLim

  • 07 Dec 2018 04:49
    Reply # 6949355 on 6010674
    Deleted user

    This is looking great David. Your photos are starting to pique my interest for the next boat. I am actually enjoying building my catamaran, it is good to have a project and something to make me spend spare time creatively, so I think there will be a 'next' boat when this one is finished. I like the idea of all plywood construction. Following with interest!

    Last modified: 07 Dec 2018 04:52 | Deleted user
  • 06 Dec 2018 16:00
    Reply # 6948416 on 6010674

    Stn 8 bulkhead glued and filleted in place.

    1 file
    Last modified: 06 Dec 2018 16:59 | Anonymous member
  • 06 Dec 2018 15:49
    Reply # 6948404 on 6010674

    Berth backrest, stn 5 bulkheads and stn 7 bulkheads glued, wedged and filleted in place

    1 file
    Last modified: 06 Dec 2018 16:58 | Anonymous member
  • 05 Dec 2018 16:58
    Reply # 6947034 on 6010674

    I'm using glass bubbles to make a runny mix for applying to the edges of the pieces. I've just ordered some size 4 hog bristle artist's brushes for this job, as the ones I have are too large.

    Then, as glass bubbles alone make a mix that is inclined to slump, I add a little colloidal silica to the remainder of the resin/glass bubble mix, which makes a stiff enough filleting mix that can still be sanded easily enough. Both fillers will make a smoother mix than the red-brown stuff, which is intended principally for fillets on hardwood work that is to be clear finished.

    The resin I'm using is Supersap bio epoxy, This doesn't make an amine blush when cured, and is easy to work with. It has to be mixed 5:2 by weight, so I'm using a cheap jeweller's digital scale for this - each mix is only 5 or 10 gms of resin, and this is the only way to be accurate enough. Also, 50ml syringes to get the resin and hardener out of the bottles, 2oz pots of the kind you get small quantities of sauces in with a takeaway meal, and disposable ice cream spoons as filleting tools.

    1 file
  • 05 Dec 2018 16:30
    Reply # 6946963 on 6010674
    Looking Good, David!

    What are you using to make the fillets? I have only used the West System 405 that looks sort of brown or red when it is applied. I am wondering what you used to make the white fillets and why.

  • 05 Dec 2018 16:02
    Reply # 6946904 on 6010674

    Inner faces of bilgeboard cases, stn 4 bulkheads and berth flats, glued, wedged, cable tied and filleted in place.

    I find that three of those cable ties on each side could be done away with, if I were to put the tabs and holes for wedges in those positions. The wedges are much easier to put in place, and more accurate, so I've changed the drawings of stn 4 bulkhead, bilgeboard cases, berth flats and berth fronts accordingly.

  • 04 Dec 2018 15:41
    Reply # 6945016 on 6010674

    Stn 6 bulkhead, glued, wedged and filleted in place.

    Stn 1 bulkhead, with tabernacle, foredeck and bow former already installed, glued, wedged and filleted in place.

    Tabernacle filleted to underside of the deck. The full sized boat probably has some blocking here.

    Forward face of stn 6 bulkhead filleted to deck stringer.

    Stn 2 arch filleted to underside of the deck and glued to the tabernacle.

  • 04 Dec 2018 09:27
    Reply # 6944638 on 6010674

    I made a mistake yesterday, when I glued the berth front to the deck stringer. I woke in the small hours, worrying whether the stn 6 bulkhead could be added after this, and had to come downstairs to the dining room aka boatbuilding shed to check. It couldn't. Luckily, the glue hadn't fully cured, and I could part the joints with a chisel.

    So, this berth front to deck stringer joint needs to be clamped/bolted/screwed/pegged while the berth front to stn 3 joint is glued, to ensure correct positioning, then slackened off while stn 6 is lifted into place, then glued and tightened.

    With this practical experience of the assembly, I can now add extra holes for wedges to the stn 6 bulkhead - I wasn't sure before. This, after all, is the principle reason for building this model: to see what works and what doesn't.

    Last modified: 05 Dec 2018 09:24 | Anonymous member
  • 03 Dec 2018 14:32
    Reply # 6943206 on 6010674

    Today's session:

    Stn 3 bulkhead glued in, along with two deck beams that the headlining will be glued to.

    Berth/galley front glued and wedged to stn 3 bulkhead. Little glue should appear on this face.

    http://www.junkrigassociation.org/resources/MemberAlbums/2757889/SibLim%207%20metre%20-%20model%20at%201_4.25%20scale/P1030213.JPG

    Berth front glued to deck stringer (berth front outside) with 11.75mm overlap at model scale, 50mm overlap at full size.

    Looking vertically down at stn 6, to check that the slots in the berth/cockpit front are lined up with the edge of the deck stringer.

    Inside the galley locker, excess glue extrudes out of the joint.

    Fillet inside the galley locker.

    Scrap 2mm HDPE laid in where the companionway slide will run, to keep the slot at constant width and clear of glue.

    The main cabin headlining glued in place on the deck beams.

    Looking forward at the headlining, with the 2mm HDPE sheet keeping the slot clean and at constant width.

    The final result of one assembly session, with stn 3 bulkhead, both cockpit/berth fronts and main cabin headlining glued in, stn 1 and stn 2 bulkheads ready to glue in next.

  • 02 Dec 2018 16:10
    Reply # 6942029 on 6941709
    David wrote:
    I have recently being looking at how RM yachts in France assemble their large plywood hulled yachts, as a way of learning something more about plywood/epoxy composite boat-building. They manage very long sheets of plywood, admittedly in a factory situation, but there is a lot that can be learned from the experts. Slow hardener in winter? 
    As far as I can see, this screengrab of the construction of the RM970 hull shows:
    • rebates along the edges of the hull panels to let the glass in flush with the surface. I don't know how to do that easily.
    • joins in the hull panels that may be either scarphs or puzzle joints, I can't see which, with glass tape on the inside.
    • Little wooden tabs screwed across the chines, to hold the two panels in the right position while epoxy is worked into the gap.
    • Ledges on the bulkheads and temporary MDF moulds to rest the topsides on while they are being fixed. I'm doing shelves with similar extensions at the sheer line, and with the addition of wedges to hold the topsides close into the bulkheads.
    • Hull panels made up of five pieces, so the SibLim 7m with three pieces should be feasible (though RM probably have some sophisticated handling equipment and/or enough manpower for these large panels).
    1 file
       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
                                                               - the Chinese Water Rat

                                                              Site contents © the Junk Rig Association and/or individual authors

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software