Niander
Well-Known Member
Id love it [if I had the time]but then I work with steel everyday!
but agree the remaining steel thickness is crucial!
but agree the remaining steel thickness is crucial!
It depends on the facilties available, a yard which repairs steel hulls all day, every day could have her fit for a circumnavigation in a few hours..
How would you tackle it? Would you over plate the whole hull? What would you do with the bad steel inside?
Well, her new owner & friends have masses of work on her - she is being re-launched today and is off via Brighton to the East Coast.
She was worth the money for the gear alone!
Di
She'd had many births on board for my liking![]()
She'd had many births on board for my liking![]()
It depends on the facilties available, a yard which repairs steel hulls all day, every day could have her fit for a circumnavigation in a few hours..
That has to be the understatement of the year. Huge amount of work to do it properly. Welding bits of steel on is not the difficult bit - assuming there is something to weld to, but stripping to get at it, coating the finished job to make sure it does not happen again and putting it all back together is more than a "few hours" work.
Yes I was exaggerating, but if you had a few people swarming over the job, it could be done in a week or so, to get her totally fine, for strength, to go back out to sea.
I'm not saying immaculate fit and finish, or the proper blasting and expensive two pack epoxy though, just good to go for a year or two, before she rusted through again..
(I'm not being funny but I have done some ship repairs back in the days)
I hope we get updates on here of how they get on
Basically that is what they did, but she will be coming out again on the East coast and the jobs done thoroughly - it was costing about £400 a month on the hard here….
I didn't know the new owner, just a chat the other evening, but he seems to know what he is doing and I wish him the best of luck. I missed the re-launch though due to some domestic bliss, but it all went well (well, there are no Notices to Mariners for Chi Harbour, so she obviously cleared the bar). She has AIS (I think) so you could look up Wind Runner if you wanted.
Di
Basically that is what they did, but she will be coming out again on the East coast and the jobs done thoroughly - it was costing about £400 a month on the hard here….
I didn't know the new owner, just a chat the other evening, but he seems to know what he is doing and I wish him the best of luck. I missed the re-launch though due to some domestic bliss, but it all went well (well, there are no Notices to Mariners for Chi Harbour, so she obviously cleared the bar). She has AIS (I think) so you could look up Wind Runner if you wanted.
Di
It looks as though someone has ground the coatings away working out from the holes to find good metal and then ground the edge area of a proposed patch to see if the metal is good. However the holes nearby suggest that the patches are going to join up! The thing will look like the bumpiest old workboat you have ever seen. If they cut out the metal and butt weld the patches in to make it fair it will be a long job and probably need stripping inside.
On the basis that simple jobs will always turn into bigger ones this is a big job that will turn into a money pit.