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Snowbird's orphaned Charger 16DL

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 PostPosted: June 27th, 2013, 5:16 pm   
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Now this is cool. I have heard of a Charger or two in the US but this is definitely the furthest south. Keep us updated on progress and welcome aboard!

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 PostPosted: June 27th, 2013, 7:11 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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Location: Florida
Just some more musings. I don't know how many of you have done any major glass grinding but if you do, here's a tip. I originally used those Tyvek siuts but at $12 ea. they get expensive. Plus, I found that the glass still seemed to get through and the elastic wrists and hood seemed to collect the glass and grind it into my skin. Found a better, much cheaper, much more comical-looking solution. I took two heavy duty black trash bags and made a suit. One bag i cut a hole for my head and arms to poke out of. The second bag i cut in two top to bottom and folded them over, taping the seam with duct tape, forming two sleeves. Slide the sleeves on your arms and tape to the pullover bag with duct tape making sure to get a complete seal. Then i used duct tape to seal the sleeves around my wrists by having he tape half on my skin and half on the bag sleeve. Do the same around my neck. Did not bother with a hood because with the ear muffs for hearin protection, the respirator, and full goggles, it wouldn't be practical. The plastic seemed to repel the glass for the most part(static electricty?) and when I was done i would simply hose off with the garden hose and had very little itching. Especially considering how much glass i was grinding. Oh yeah, one other thing, the tyvek suit would tear where I leaned on my forearms. Plastic would tear, too, but I rectified that by reinforcing the contact area with a couple strips of duct tape. Very resilient stuff. Yeah, it hurt a little pulling the tape off, but not nearly as bad as trying to fall asleep with your arms and neck on fire. One last thing, don't forget to tape the bottom edge of the suit to your pants! That glass is like a mosquito, it WILL find any hole in your armour and make you miserable!


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 PostPosted: June 27th, 2013, 10:02 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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I digress. here's some more stuff. These are pics of the transom removal. You can see the dark rotted wood around the top of the transom. The boat is upside down, remember. I definitely think that the core was balsa. It was in comprised of about 2" x 2" squares and it was easily dented with my fingernail. There are also balsa "stringers" that run up the bottom of the boat. They appear to be about 1 inch square. They are in good condition and I'm not about to dig them out for no good damn reason!

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in this pic you can actually see the square pattern left by the balsa cubes.

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Here's some ugly ones. This is why it's bad to see carpenter ants crawling on your boat. These were taken around the drain ports for the motor well. Yes, those are ant eggs. Nasty little bastards!

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This is the back side of the layer of glass that separated the balsa layer from the plywood center layer.

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Ok. That's all my photos for now.


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 PostPosted: June 27th, 2013, 10:20 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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DoktorC, glad you caught that in the subject title! I wasn't sure if anybody would get that. We get a lot of snowbirds down here in the winter. Seems a long way to drag a boat but I have no other explanation.


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 PostPosted: June 28th, 2013, 12:09 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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Location: Florida
Trying to post from my phone. These are pics of my first sheet of coosa. Don't know if anybody has used this stuff but its a fiberglass composite that is 30% lighter than plywood and contains zero wood. Not cheap, though. 4 x 8 x 3/4" sheet is $240 and i had to drive two hours to get it. Anyway, laid out my parts and thats what these are. I can get both layers of transom and both kneeboards out of one sheet and the rear seat crosspiece, floor, and floor support out the second sheet.

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 PostPosted: June 28th, 2013, 8:12 pm   
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Here's some shots of the first sheet of coosa fitted it. Used a ton of screws in order to get even clamping across the entire width.

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 PostPosted: June 28th, 2013, 8:18 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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got a pic of the mfg. tag. Sorry its upside down. forgot to rotate it before I uploaded.

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 PostPosted: June 28th, 2013, 8:48 pm   
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Joined: July 21st, 2012, 2:31 pm
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The first layer can go in in one piece. No problem. The second sheet has to fit in the remaining gap and its tight.

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So here's my solution: I'm going to make the second layer a four piece layer. One strip that goes in the gap, one piece that has the contour, and two side pieces. Each joint will lock together by routing a male and female edge. Got a couple edges routed tonight and hoping to get the rest done tomorrow.

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Here's the top and bottom pieces routed and fitted together
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 PostPosted: June 28th, 2013, 10:22 pm   
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Joined: March 31st, 2012, 5:53 pm
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I like the joint. Looks like a good tight fit...coosa dust is brutal though isn't it lol. Do you figure you need something across the joint for added strength?

Make certain your core is dry on the pad ad where your knees attach....both were trouble spots on my DL. Looks like you're making some good progress though.

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 PostPosted: June 29th, 2013, 5:53 am   
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Doc, by dry I assume you mean no moisture, correct? I have some questions for you or anybody that might know. Would the transom be any stronger if i epoxied a layer of woven between the layers? Also, is there a good reason the factory didn't bond the floor to the hull and center stringer? Seems to me it would "lock" the hull together. Kinda like a unibody versus framed cars. Thanks.


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