With summer guests and visitors gone, a good load of logs
cut and stored for the winter and plenty of
produce from the vegetable garden,
I was able to make real progress on the restoration of this little vessel. I
was quite frustrated a few weeks ago because all my efforts had been focussed
on the cockpit. I had obtained good results but as the boat is on a trailer
no-one could see or appreciate the fruits of my labour. I have been working to
the early advice given by my good friend John (the unlikely Boat Builder). His
advice was to concentrate on those things that would get her launched –
interior comforts and decoration could wait. It’s a logical argument supported
by the fact that working on the outside of the boat when the days are dry and
inside when they are wet means that I have no excuse for failing to do
something most days.While we had guests and visitors I was able to work on bits of the boat I could detach and bring home.
To date however, in the boatyard I had little obvious to show and, perhaps
even worse, the beautiful painted hull was beginning to look as bad as the rest
of the boat due to my sanding efforts above it.
So, last week I embarked on a slight deviation in strategy
without compromising the over-riding philosophy. I took a long hard look at the
boat and decided the single biggest effort I could make that would make a
noticeable change would be to clean up the cabin sides and polish the green
hull. For the cabin sides, it took five days of full time effort. Starting with
a wash and degrease then a P50 sanding disks, followed by a P120, then a P190
attached to a Bosch detail sander, then hand sanding with P340 and finally a
P600 grade paper. Some advice suggested that I should continue down to P1000
and then P2000 (wet). I couldn’t source these final two grades and so I can
only hope I have gone far enough. Following the sanding I used a heavy and then
a light grade rubbing compound. At this stage I washed the hull paintwork and
then applied two coats of marine polish (with Tefal in it!). The overall effect
was outstanding and the result was well within the standard 100ft test. In fact
she even looked good from 10ft away - a real boost to my morale.
The disc and detail sanders ran off my Honda suitcase
generator – an item I would not be without (thanks Peter for selling it to me
at such a reasonable price!) When it came to compounding and polishing however,
I found the electric polisher to be far too heavy to work with especially on
the cabin sides which were above my head. Instead I used rechargeable drills
fitted with wool bonnets. The first is a Black and Decker which has proved to
be remarkably good. The second is a recent purchase from my local builder’s
merchant (the 'Man Shop' as Susan calls it) It’s an 'Energer' and it came with a
set of screwdriver tips and drill bits of assorted sizes all for 29 Euros –
best of all it has two batteries. It’s not as fast as the Black and Decker but
for compounding and polishing it's fine. The advice is never to use a mains
driven drill for polishing unless it is variable speed because they turn too
fast and can burn the gel-coat. So two rechargeable drills and three batteries,
charged overnight, provided all the power I needed to complete the job.
Seaward
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