One of the things about boat restoration, at least the way I am doing it, is that it requires a lot of equipment. You need an array of tools for woodworking, for mixing and applying composite materials, and for painting and finishing. You also need supplies of the raw materials for all these activities. And then there's the boat itself, hogging up the prime real estate in the center of the shop.
It's very important to keep all this stuff organized, put away, clean, and fully functional. I am a big believer of the idea of a place for everything and everything in its place.
But around the time of my last post, you would have never guessed that if you happened to stumble upon my shop, which I had unwittingly turned into a stirring monument to either A) Entropy or B) Sheer Sloven Laziness. I prefer option A but I am sure my mom would have picked B had she seen the place.
So I got to work becoming Mr. Clean (without the earring). Among other things, I made a nice white oak cabinet for my hand planes and some mahogany dividers for my tool chest. See photos below.
I also cleaned and sharpened all of my tools so they would be ready to go. I even went so far as to reorganize my sandpaper! It's surprising how much of the stuff you can accumulate working on boats. I have the usual sandpaper box with individual full-size sheets in both regular and wet/dry, in all the standard grits ranging from 40-2,000. I also possess an arsenal of different papers for each of nine different electric or air powered sanders plus a bunch of hand sanders, including one three feet long. In addition to different grits, these come with different backings like Velcro or adhesive and different hole patterns for different methods of dust extraction. The grit can also be made of different materials for specific jobs; you don't use the same one to sand wood that you use to sand epoxy and the epoxy type is different still from the one you use on paint. I have a wall chart that helps keep me from losing my mind over this.
One of the reasons I have so many sanders is that I really don't enjoy sanding very much and am always looking for ways to make it easier. To speed things up, I change paper often and try to move fairly quickly from one grit to the next highest one. If I get really impatient, I can quickly find myself surrounded in a pile of sandpaper boxes, discarded used sandpaper discs, plus two or three or four different sanders, their power cords, and the vacuums I hook them up to.
It was in the middle of one of these Pig-Pen (yes, there's a hyphen in Pig-Pen) episodes that I finally decided that enough was enough and that I needed to stop working on the boat and clean things up before I either injured myself, broke a favorite tool by sitting on it, or accidentally burned the whole shop down. And just as I made this resolution I stood up and stepped on something and snapped it in half. It was a part for the boat that I had spent days making. Ay Carumba.
So that's what I have been doing. That, and well, um, uh, I also got kind of distracted by the idea of making a "Krenov style" hand plane. It's not finished yet, but here's a picture of mine sitting in front of one made by a guy named Scott Meek, who is probably the best wooden hand plane maker in the U.S. Yes, I am copying his work for the most part and, yes, mine isn't nearly as good. But, hey, it's my first one! Ya' gotta start somewhere, and if I am going to imitate someone it might as well be Scott who, as he'll be the first to admit, got his start by copying Krenov's planes. I am guessing my first crack at imitating Shakespeare would fare similarly.
These side journeys are now just about over. I like, totally, promise that my next blog will be about something I did on the IC. It will not be another blog post about why I am not writing more blog posts.
Oh, one last thing, Cosette is now doing very well. It's been too hot to bring her into the shop as my assistant, but she'll be returning soon in the fall when I expect to back working full throttle on the boat.
1 comment:
Love the update! I find that fascinating as well. I can imagine it is also too hot for you to work in the shop. It looks great.
Post a Comment