As purchased - September 2014 |
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June 2016 9' shorter mast with hammock :) |
COCKPIT
The cockpit did not drain, there were two
small, inadequate scuppers and there was
no arch in the deck to direct water to the
scuppers. There was a 1/4" high sill
around the hatch which was 3/4" higher
than the deck and a trip hazard so that water
backed up on the deck and flooded the engine
compartment/steering gear compartment.. We
had to build a new deck over the old to have
room to fit gutters around the hatch. There
was no propane locker so we had to build
one of those too, into the aft end of the
cockpit. Neither were there gutters around
the side locker hatches so those filled with
water when it rained.
We started with a new bimini / stern rail
and progressed through re-sking the deck
with an arch to improve drainage, the addition
of a proper propane locker, new hatches with
drain gutters. ( Can you imagine a huge engine
hatch with no gutters ? ) and Sharons impeccable
new non-skid.
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No propane locker, raised deck hatch without
gutters routinely flooded engine compartment.
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Building new propane locker
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Sharon fillets the new deck before glassing
over |
New gutters drain to scuppers, and
finished
propane locker
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Enlarging the inadequate scuppers |
A little paint and new scuppers with be finished
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New propane locker, new arched deck with
flush engine hatch with gutters,new stern
rails & propane locker |
Cockpit .... finito !
Finito ! |
RUDDER mod & bottom job
The odd shape of the rudder and lack of balance
(contrary to Benford's original design) meant
that a lot of the prop wash did not move
over the largest part, this made turning
at low speeds quite difficult without using
the bow thruster.
While hauled for fresh bottom paint we added
two 20" X 7" stainless steel "fish
tails". The greater surface area within
the prop wash and the 15° angle on the
tails has made a dramatic difference to turning
ability in close quarter manouvering.
Re-painted the bottom. How many wives would
get under the plastic with a sander, my wife
is awesome !
My photo is the aftermath of sanding with
goggles and a mask. That crap gets under
everything but Sharon looked as cute as a
button in her painting outfit.
PS. I'm too old for this stuff. I will never
do another bottom job ! |
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My wife is so damned cute !
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I didn't fare so well even with goggles,
suit and mask. What a crappy job |
WINDOWS -
Between September 2014 and June 2015 we installed
17 custom Bomon windows and one brass
port
hole. I've installed Bomon windows
on my
two previous boats so obviously I am
quite
pleased with them. The windows were
by far
the biggest job we will undertake on
Dirt Free as the old windows were simple wooden frames
over glass rabbeted into the structure.
The
damage done in getting these rotten
wood
frames off was substantial. We also
repainted
the entire superstructure and Sharon
did
all the non-skid after re-glassing
much of
it.
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Days and days and days of sanding |
Sharon doing the new non-skid |
Caulking will NEVER seal plywood ! the screw
driver slides in like in butter |
First of 17 new windows going in |
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New hatch and new structure glassed in place
ready to be trimmed out for the new
windows.
I had planned an entire morning to remove
the badly leaking butterfly hatch that
you
see in the "before" photo
at left
below ... it was completely rotten
and took
all of 30 seconds. The butterfly hatch
was
replaced with a heavy duty aluminum
frame
unit. |
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New Bow rail, $50.00, Stachions and life lines free from
a boat being scrapped, 55lb. Rocna
$300.00.
All in Canadian dollarettes so actully
close
to free :) |
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PILOT HOUSE -
DOORS - The pilot house doors are securely mounted
on sail tracks at the top, there was
no track
or method of securing them along the
bottom
so they banged constantly in choppy
weather
and opened whenever they felt like
it. The
plan is to rebuild them and fit them
with
matching Bomon windows then devise
a securing
and locking method along with a lower
track
then replace the forward wooden (rotten)
track with aluminum. We'll be doing
this
job over the winter under shrink wrap
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BOW THRUSTER -
Hull shape, smallish propleller, smallish
rudder with flow directed low all add
up
to the fact that Dirt Free does not like to turn at low speed so the
old single crew trick of hammering
the throttle
with the rudder hard over and then
going
to reverse does not work as well as
it did
on my other single screw boats so a
thruster
is the immediate fix. Later on I will
make
some rudder modifications and see if
that
helps.
Note the illegal below the sheerline
placement
of the stern light. She also came with
no
forward running light or anchor light
and
had been cruised in that condition. |
First ..... cut a really big hole ! |
Slide tube into place |
Trim tube for flared fairing |
Add lots of filler then sand, sand, sand
and sand some more. |
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INTERIOR |
Typical "before" joinerwork |
SALOON
The entire saloon was panelled with yellow
painted plywood with the most amateur
joiner
work imaginable. There were so many
things
wrong that it's difficult to list them,
no
access to the bilges, leaking windows
, atrocious
joinerwork, an aluminum (dumb, dumb,
dumb)
waste tank that was inaccessible, a
head
compartment without a shower or any
means
of draining one, no refrigeration and
the
list goes on ..... |
Yellow painted plywood panelling, Hard
wood
floors glued to deck with no bilge
access |
Much more comfortable. Yes, that's a fireplace
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More yellow painted plywood |
Love that fireplace |
Cut through floor to make bilge access |
XAwaiting photo |
Hardwood sole chiseled out a plank at a time.
Hinged bilge hatches being fitted |
New cork sole and hatches where none existed
before
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Hinged engine compartment hatch integral
to settee fitted and functional
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Hard to believe it was built with no bilge
access ! Table now retracts. |
Tore the wall out behind the forward dinette
bench ... also torn out |
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Fixed table and two dinette benches |
Retractable table and one less dinette
bench |
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Teak Teak frame cupboard doors with laminated
glaas panes |
Got rid of this wall with sliding privacy
pabel and settee The ceiling, the only thing worth keeping. |
Now we have much more room and much more
storage space |
GALLEY -
Consisted of a stove, sink and delaminating
formica countertop |
First - install a refrigerator |
X |
V-BERTH |
Carpet removed from walls |
Nice piece of drift wood huh ? |
Horrible carpeted walls |
Beaded board walls and custom headboard by
Sharon |
Before |
Sharon has always wantee crown molding. Who
am I to deny her !
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Mid- way |
Then she asked for hidden lighting behind
the molding..... I can deny this woman
nothing
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HEAD / SHOWER
The head compartment had hardwood floors
which we ripped out. We then built
a drain
pan so we could install a shower and
covered
all surfaces with the same FRP panels
we
used in the saloon and elswhere. |
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Awaiting photoX |
PILOT HOUSE
The ubiquitous yellow painted plywood,
a
wheel that will impale you in rough
seas. |
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XAwaiting photo |
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ENGINE |
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Awaiting photoX |
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Awaiting photoX |
ELECTRICAL |
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xAwaiting photo |
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Awaiting photox |
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Awaiting photox |
MAST AND DINGHY (and hammock)
We Cut 9' off the mast so we could do the
New York State Canal System then rigged
a
hammock to the boom. At some point
this summer
the boom will be rigged to lift our
new dinghy
on to the cabin trunk If all goes well
we
will also rig the mast with a steadying
sail.
I don't really think it will accomplish
much
but it will look kinda neat especially
if
we can get a tanbark square top.
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