May 26, 2002

Fairing the Hull

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We went to Maryland this weekend, and I finally got to work on the boat.  This is the boat which my father-in-law has been restoring for many years.  When he started it, he planned to sail it.  Now, he just wants to finish restoring it.  I'm going to help him finish it, at which point I think he might let me sail it, too!  I had planned to go down during my spring break, but the weather didn't cooperate.

In any case, the wooden Luders 16s (the class of boat to which this one belongs) were mostly built in the decade or so after World War II.  This particular boat was moored in Baltimore, until it sunk at its mooring (apparently it was struck by something).  It sat on the bottom for a while, until the boat yard operator towed it out and told the owner that he had two weeks to do something with it.  That's when my father-in-law bought it.  He repaired the damage in the hull and replaced the whole outer layer of wood (the hull is 5 layers thick).  Then, he started fairing, which is where we stand today.

The object of fairing is to make a surface which is perfectly curved in every direction.  There are two goals.  The first is to make the boat slice cleanly through the water; the second is to make the hull look smooth when you apply a glossy bottom paint.  I describe it as making a wooden hull look like fiberglass.  In any case, the process of fairing is simple, but very time consuming.  You roll a straight edge along the surface at various angles in order to identify which areas are high and which are low.  You sand the high areas until they aren't high any more.  You apply an epoxy-based filler to the low areas in order to make them high, and then you sand them too.  As you might guess, there is lots of sanding involved.

In any case, hopefully we'll be ready to paint the bottom soon, after which we can move on to the interior.  I'm learning a lot, and it's nice to work with my hands once in a while.

Posted by allen at 08:34 PM

May 23, 2002

Rhodes Hall

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I promised a better picture of my building (home of the funky stairwell from a few weeks ago).  So here it is, with the baseball field in the foreground.  Not much else to say about it, though...

Posted by allen at 08:32 PM

Cornell Landmark

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This is my favorite image of the Cornell clock tower so far.  It doesn't look quite as good in this shrunk version, but the lighting was just right.  I especially like the textured surface of the brick tower.   

With the arrival of warm weather, I haven't been taking as many pictures.  The main reason, I think, is convenience.  During the winter, I kept my camera in a pocket of my winter coat.  And, since it was cold, I never went out without it.  Now, though, I keep it in my backpack, and I often forget it when I go out without the pack.  It's a lame excuse, I know.  I'm trying to do better. To get "caught up," I wandered around for about an hour this morning grabbing the standard tourist shots.

I think I'm ready to break out my film camera again.  I would really like to stick with digital, because it's so much less expensive to operate (no film, no developing).  But really learning photography requires better equipment than a point-and-shoot camera, and SLR digital cameras are still way out of my price range.  So, I'm going to start slow, pick up another lens or two for my Canon Rebel G, try to learn some stuff, and hope that they come out with a reasonably priced Canon digital SLR body in a couple years.  If my experiment works out, maybe I'll post some of those pics here, too.

Posted by allen at 08:21 PM