Sunday, 23 July 2023

Completed job list '22/'23 lay up..

By way of record keeping, and to remind me in the future - here's the completed job list from the winter layover... the layover this year was a little longer than usual as I opted for a slightly later lift in due to poor weather shortening the original lift period. As a result I got more stuff done than I would usually..  have to say it was also nice to be doing maintenance in good weather for a change!
  1. I finally managed to get round to fixing the damage to the nose that had occurred under a previous owner. I'm guessing this was anchor chain damage, and that at some time the chain had jumped from the fairlead and then spent a while grinding away GRP. Either way it needed a rebuild and as is my want I was seriously overthinking what I needed to do which was putting me off from doing anything - always a mistake..  In the end I purchased some 2 part epoxy putty (Milliput) and it is now my official wonder product of 2022 - amazing stuff.. job done!

    Reminder of how it looked - note the small lump of Milliput as I had just started to fix it...

          

    I was using the White Superfine version..  it's a two part epoxy putty that when kneaded together for 7 minutes, can then be moulded, worked and shaped like putty or plasticine, but it dries rock hard within 3-4 hours... No preparation is required as it also has adhesive properties, though I gave the surface a quick wipe down with acetone.. better still this stuff can be worked and smoothed with water - so the following is mid stage...  rolled a tube of Milliput between my hands, then placed and shaped fairly roughly, before then wetting your fingers (I had a cup of water handy) and smoothing it out...




    It also has other applications... as I had a small ball of it left over after the nose repair, I tried it on some old screw holes; roll a thin tube of it, pushed that into the hole and smoothed off the outer edge with a wet finger. Similarly, small surface gel craters/gouges can also be treated same way, take a small piece, press it flat, and then place that in the crater, before pushing it in hard, and then smoothing off with a wet finger. All of these had dried rock hard when I checked, and all were well stuck. Brilliant stuff, and very much recommended..

  2. A smooth off of her bottom - no idea how many years of antifouling paint on top of antifouling  paint there is down there, but while it's not falling off it isn't smooth either, so a sanding pole with some mesh and a bucket of water is planned... I bought some 60 grit sanding mesh this year, as the stuff I used last year was too fine a grit (120) and was only doing a partial job, but either the stuff I bought was rubbish, or it was too coarse, but either way the experiment was an abject failure. I wondered if the antifoul had dried out too hard over the winter as the 60 grit was just skidding over the surface rather than biting, but when I went back to the old stuff it was working fine so I have a suspicion the stuff I bought is rubbish. No worries a couple of hours with the old stuff and she was a little smoother, still looks like the surface of the moon in places..  I'd really like get her soda blasted and taken back to surface, but we shall see. Either way I'm calling this one done for this year..

  3. The gel coat on Sparrow is original but is getting thin to non-existent in places - I will not paint her (that way lies madness), but I do need to stop further UV damage to places where it is thin - in fact, I've got about a half dozen spots where the gel coat is so thin that the underneath (GRP/matting) is beginning to show as a brown layer..  I masked off three or four of these, and with the paint I'd roughly colour matched for the  the nose repair (above), lightened it up a bit more, so the difference wasn't quite so marked, and put a couple of layers on...  so it's not perfect, but it is better than it was, and I am going to call it more of a success than Elon Musk's recent rocket event...  this has continued to work well with no pitting/cracking or flaking so I'll do the rest over time, but I would like to get a better colour match so I think I need a trip to the DIY store soon for a colour chart.


  4. Cabin curtains - the old one's were way beyond the pale (literally 😁)...  the mother in law ran these up for me in 2013 when I bought Sparrow, so what we're seeing is 10 years of UV plus a dry/damp salt atmosphere...    you can see the original pattern but mostly they are bleached white (or rather a 'grubby grey')


    I washed them a few years ago but it didn't do much good... 😁


    ...and here's the new one's..  material sourced on Amazon for about 8 quid..  chosen purely for cost, and that they are quite cheerful..


    ...you can see the wonky seems from the hand sewer machine* on this one following - abandoned that soon after and sewed them by hand the old fashioned way...  they aren't going to win any sewing prizes, but given the primary purpose is security (keeping prying eyes out), with a long second of keeping the sun out, then they'll do nicely..  


      Here's them on the boat..



      I have to say that despite the piss poor sewing I'm quite chuffed with them...  took the opportunity to replace the bungees they hang on at the same time. Security and shade in one fell swoop..

      * Quite a clever little machine but not even powerful enough to sew a hem in the very thin material I was using for the new curtains, so I hunkered down and hand sewed them...



      Don't waste you're money..
    • Centre mast support needed trimming - was slightly too long for the current configuration. that's it, supporting the middle of the mast...

    • Mooring tackle updates:

      1. Swivel was new 2016
      2. I 'end for ended' the chain (bought 2016), swapped it round so the old end is new beginning and vice versa
      3. Replaced the pick up buoy itself  with a spare I had in the garage
      4. New shackle between buoy and chain
      5. New shackle between chain and swivel, and ..
      6. But despite best intentions the shackle for swivel to mooring buoy is original (I went out in the tender in a a "sprightly" F5 gusting F6 to attach the top chain and pickup buoy to the mooring - tide was running like a bastard, the wind was from the east - so on the nose - and I got well and truly soaked, but while doing it the pin from the new mooring shackle slipped out of my fingers (oh my God, how I cursed) - stupid, stupid schoolboy error, but I paid for it as I had to row back and get a spare shackle, and then battle out again - so serve me right..😆) I'll upgrade it next year ...

    • Fresh coat of bilge paint applied throughout

    • Running rigging replaced - topping lift/jib halyard/main halyard 

    • Not on the list this year, but I thought I'd giver her an acid wash as the water line was looking a bit brown, stained and dingy Once again the Oxalic proved little short of miraculous ..  amazing stuff..  mixed it with some wallpaper paste to give it a little stiffness, in warm water, slapped it on all over, left it 10 minutes, and then lots of rinsing later, and the difference between before and after is astonishing..

      That's Oxalic run off on her bottom, so definitely a job to do before you antifoul rather than after..  😀

    • Then last of all for this update - I have a new tender (😏). I'm even more chuffed with this, than I can say. I was, on the whole, fairly happy with "Fledgling" - the old tender - but she had a low freeboard, was surprisingly heavy, and was also small - any more than one adult and it all becomes a little trepidous (as we found out last autumn [clicky]) so I have had an idle eye open all winter for a possible replacement.

      One got washed up on the slip at the club over the winter, no owner has come forward, no identifying marks, so I was giving her an eye over as a possible replacement when one of the club guys mentioned that there was another one in the yard available for free as the owner had swallowed the anchor and given up sailing completely.. so meet new tender.. she's solid, lighter than the current one, strong, has a better freeboard, and I've already taken loose paint off (wire brush in a drill), washed out, put new rowlock sockets on and swapped over locking chain from old tender, drilled a new bung hole.. plenty more to do on her but she's been brilliant so far, and she rows well too!



    Regular/annual items:
    1. Rub down and coat of paint on cockpit locker lids / wash boards - locker lids sanded, filled, clamped, sanded, painted... just washboards were OK at the time but will need doing before end of season.
    2. Rub down and coat of wood preservative on rubbing strakes / cockpit board / outboard pad / hand rails (as needed) - all were done
    3. Antifouled (Hempel Cruising Performer this year)
    4. Serviced the outboard (also to fix oil leak) - service was done but the fix was not a good one, and the outboard has now been sold/replaced.
    5. Serviced Life Jackets (new bottle in one of them this year)
      1. Pressure washed her bottom

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