rafiki_
Well-Known Member
Re: The plant pot
Nice work. The cleats will look very nice too. Love the improvisation with the pen, great job!
Nice work. The cleats will look very nice too. Love the improvisation with the pen, great job!
Great stuff wayne - thanks for the updates.
Don't worry at all about not using my cleats - I was just mailing you leftovers and I realised they were on the small side. No problem at all; just give them away to someone else or ebay them :encouragement:
I am slightly worried about the weight you're adding. Sheets of plywood etc soon add up. Fat cleats, backing pads, GRP over the pad, etc all provide great strength, but perhaps more than you need and 20kg that you don't need. It all adds up!
W.,
nice progress indeed, keep the good work!
on the weight issue, I once tried to calculate how much I ripped off and how much I added, failed miserably, but at one point I just calculated all the litres of epoxy I've bought and was quite shocked at the weight! Don't remember now, but was over 100lt.
My concern would be on WHERE you add most of the weight and it seems that it's not low enough to count as ballast...
I guess if you feel it is too wobbly (lacking a better term for that) you can always add some real ballast in the bilges. Hope the outlets above w/l are high enough and don't end up below w/l.
looking fwd to the next installment!
cheers
V.
Wayne, as there seems to be a consensus of concern about the extra weight, I wonder if, instead of lead ballast in the bilge, you might fabricate a steel shoe and attach it to the keel. You have the skills, and in addition to the righting function a shoe would be protection against grounding.
I am pretty sure the weight of steel shoe would not affect the roll characteristics of the boat by making it too 'whippy', as it would not be that far below the centre of flotation.
I just had to do a sample of the hull paint to see how it will look, i thought it was a bit to blue in the tin if you know what i mean, i like it but maybe a bit to bright, i was hoping for a darker shade.
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nah,
different hue, not worth that much and comeon, on a piece of plasterboard, ts ts...
serious, I think this blue is way too bold and once you spread it on the whole hull, will be rather harsh
(all imho of course!)
Why don't you look at car paints (or truck ones that are harder wearing)?
cheers
V.
If you already own the paint you could add a little black pigment
All coloured paint comes from pigment, not sure if there is marine only pigment. The trick is to use only a little bit. It's usually available at diy shops, they may even tint it for you at the paint dept. Then do another test panel and after drying give it a good kicking to see if it's durableNot sure if that can be done. Would it need a certain pigment?
All coloured paint comes from pigment, not sure if there is marine only pigment. The trick is to use only a little bit. It's usually available at diy shops, they may even tint it for you at the paint dept. Then do another test panel and after drying give it a good kicking to see if it's durable