Posts tagged canoe building
The Final Boat - Going Home

I've got all the bling on the boat and the last of the varnish on the decks and gunwales. I'm going to shoot another coat or two on the hull. I've got some varnish drips and a few spots of glue from putting the gunwales together that I want too sand out before I call the boat done.

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Sneak Preview!

Sneak preview! I've gotten most of the bling fastened to the boat and some of the finish. I screwed the stem bands to the stems and hung the carrying handles today and got another coat of varnish on the wood parts of the boat. The next time I get a sunny day I'll try to get the boat outside and get some better close up shots of details on the boat.

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Adding Stability

Two more things to sand. Canoes generally have a center thwart, something going from one side of the canoe to the other which gives the hull more rigidity. Small solo canoes like this one have the paddler near the center of the boat where a center thwart would be in the way.

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Burning Through Sandpaper

This is what I had in mind when I said to remember all the goopy resin on the decks and gunwales. I've burned through a pile of sandpaper in the last 3 or 4 days and I've got most of the sanding done. I used the random orbital sander with 100 grit pads to knock most of the resin off and then worked up through 120, 150 and 180 grits by hand. I had nice weather the last two days so I moved outside to do the sanding. That keeps the sawdust out of the shop but more than that, natural sunlight shows sanding imperfections better than any lights I have inside the shop.

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Stem Bands - Like Bumpers on a Boat

Stem bands. The stems are like the bumpers on a canoe. I like to finish a canoe with brass bands on the leading edges of the stems. The functionality is questionable but they sure have a nautical look. A mill file to shape the ends, sand paper and steel wool to polish them and they're ready to go on the boat. They'll just be screwed on, not glued so they can be taken off the boat to re-polish them when the brass loses its shine.

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My Shop Isn't Messy, It's Busy

I'm still working on the four pieces of cherry that will make up the gunwales on the boat. They have paid visits to the table saw and the band saw and I've been all over them with planes and rasps. The more wood I can get off of them the easier they will be to fasten to the boat.

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On, Out, Repeat

Clamp them in, take them out. Repeat. Getting the inwales cut to the right length and angles takes some time. The pieces of cherry started out being 3/4"x3/4" and I used a plane to taper them both in thickness and in width at each end. the shape of the canoe is something that the strips don't want to take and it takes a lot of clamps to hold them in place. The thinner they are, the easier they are to get bent in place.

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The Wood Butcher's Art

I'm doing what I can without making a decision on the seat placement. I said I was glad to be done with the fiberglass and the main reason is that I get to move on to practicing the wood butcher's art. I'll have nine scuppers on each side of the boat, each one 4" long with 4" between each of them.

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Getting Tired of the View

I'm tired of this view of the boat and am glad that it is time to move on from the fiberglass. I've got all of the coats of resin on the hull that she's going to get and I'm going to wait awhile to let it completely cure before I start sanding.

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Crank Up the Coffee Pot - And The Heat!

Sunday morning early I cranked up the heaters and the coffee pot. It took me two hours to get the first coat of resin on the cloth but the subsequent coats will be quicker than that. The inside of the boat is concave in most spots and it can take some persuasion to get the cloth to stick to the hull.

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Next Big Step: Fiberglass Cloth on the Interior

Next. I've got the cloth on the inside of the boat and am ready to pin it to the hull with resin. It's already noon and I like to have a full day to deal with a step like this so it won't happen before tomorrow. Hopefully it will be warmer in the next couple days, keeping the shop warm enough is tough when temps are in the 20's outside.

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Almost There

Almost there. I've sanded the inside of the hull as far as I can go with the random orbital sander and now I'll hand sand the last foot or so on each end. With that cleaned up I'll put a base coat of resin on the hull and then the fiberglass cloth with another 4 coats of resin.

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What You Don't Want to See in Your Canoe

What you don't want to see when you look in the bottom of your canoe. Dave's building form was good for clamping strips of wood together but not so good for being able to wipe up excess glue before it dried. I'll remove the larger chunks with chisels and then sand the rest. This might take awhile.

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Saved from the Fire Pit, For Now

I couldn't act on my threat to burn the form until after I got the cloth on the outside of the hull. The hull was flimsy and prone to move and having the hull on the form was the sure way that the hull's final and permanent shape would be correct. I don't think that I need the form any more but I won't get rid of it until the boat is done.

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Old Cabin Wood

If you'll indulge me. My mom's family had a cabin in western Minnesota that was our destination when we went on a "big vacation". A great uncle of mine owned a sawmill and he had bought 40 acres on Games Lake in the mid 50's. I'm guessing that he cut some lumber off of it to sell but it was never clear cut. Mom's dad ended up with the property and he used the property as a wood lot for firewood to heat the house on their quarter section that he farmed.

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