Pcolafisher
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2013
- Messages
- 188
Pek, can you explain or show more of the stem band you'll be working to change? I guess that's why I need to follow your build. Thx
Pek, can you explain or show more of the stem band you'll be working to change? I guess that's why I need to follow your build. Thx
Simply amazing work, tagging along for the ride. Not many wood boats around my parts.
pek, everybody makes "mistakes" building their boats. You are certainly not alone there. If you have a multi-tool, you cut it free to fix it with that tool and a blade that actually can make a cut along the flat surface. But everybody does make mistakes. And usually only the builder will ever know where theri mistakes are. The viewing public will never see them...honestly!
Yep, you are the only one who will ever know (besides all of us now). I certainly have had my share of "oh craps" with my rebuild!
By the sounds of it I don't think it will affect her performance at all (it doesn't sound like the area will be noticably in the water when up and planing, -- don't worry.)
............. This stuff happens to everyone. I read a story years ago about the Harvey Gamage shipyard in Maine (A builder of large commercial fishing boats and hundreds of other boats), about a matched pair of sistership Eastern rigged draggers (something like 80 - 95 feet), this was probably in the 1930's or 40's, big heavy wood construction. They built one dragger that worked out very well and was liked by its owner. Someone else went to the Gamage yard and signed a contract to have another identical dragger built,. The boat was in frame (all framed up, ready for the planking to start) when the owner of he yard drove in one day and thought something didn't look right as he saw her sitting there on the building ways, so he had the yard foreman go out and take some measurements. As it tuns out she was framed up with about a foot more beam on one side of the boat than on the other. ..... The solution was to jack the narrow side out to match the beamier side and keep going. During her working life the second boat always held more fish than the first boat, even though they were sisterships. -- This stuff always happens.![]()
I see what you mean, it looks like it is biased to the near side in the picture. What does it look like when viewed looking down the center line from back aft? Can you see anything then?
Another story that was told to me by Wade Pedersen (grandson of Hans Pedersen, ..Hans Pedersen & sons boatbuilders Keyport N.J.). ............. In a production boatbuilding shop it is pretty common to have two crews of men, each with their own lead man, one for each side of the boat. Apparently one day the two lead men in the shop got into an argument and weren't talking to each other ......... at all. So the story goes that the day was moving along; the two crews had been diligently working away planking up their respective sides when Hans came down from his office to see how work was progressing on the new lapstrake sea skiff they were building for a customer. As Hans walked around the front of the boat he completely lost his temper at the sight of the planks about 4 inches higher on one side of the boat than on the other (the same number of planks on both sides!) It seems that in their disagreement, the two lead men weren't even checking each other's work to see that the planking was lining up side to side. Hans told his men to take a skill saw, cut off all the planking and start over again. Yep, things happen.
I see what you mean, it looks like it is biased to the near side in the picture. What does it look like when viewed looking down the center line from back aft? Can you see anything then?
Another story that was told to me by Wade Pedersen (grandson of Hans Pedersen, ..Hans Pedersen & sons boatbuilders Keyport N.J.). ............. In a production boatbuilding shop it is pretty common to have two crews of men, each with their own lead man, one for each side of the boat. Apparently one day the two lead men in the shop got into an argument and weren't talking to each other ......... at all. So the story goes that the day was moving along; the two crews had been diligently working away planking up their respective sides when Hans came down from his office to see how work was progressing on the new lapstrake sea skiff they were building for a customer. As Hans walked around the front of the boat he completely lost his temper at the sight of the planks about 4 inches higher on one side of the boat than on the other (the same number of planks on both sides!) It seems that in their disagreement, the two lead men weren't even checking each other's work to see that the planking was lining up side to side. Hans told his men to take a skill saw, cut off all the planking and start over again. Yep, things happen.
I can see what you are talking about..... Honestly, that will not effect the performance of the boat at all, so anything you do would be for your own peace of mind. And I will leave that up to you as to what you are comfortable withNo one will ever see it.