Come to the table, for all is ready.
Today was a short day, but an expensive one. It started with a trip to Home Depot to pick up some strapping to make cross braces. Somehow I ended up buying a DeWalt 12V cordless drill. Then I came home and installed the cross braces, and put the tops on the tables, and plus I ordered the kit. Here are today’s interesting (to me) discoveries:
- Walking through the tool corral in Home Depot is scary – tools keep leaping towards your shopping cart, and you have to keep fending them off or you’re going to end up spending thousands of dollars. There was a particularly aggressive mitre saw that kept stalking us.
- Forget quick release drill chucks – the real secret to productivity is to have two drills, one with the drill bit and one with the screw driver bit. After the DeWalt cordless drill had charged for a little while (half an hour or so), I was able to do it that way.
- You ever noticed when two contractors are talking about things with dimensions, they’ll often pull out a tape measure and look at that dimension to help visualize it? Well, it turns out there is a reason for that. I made a mental calculation, and thought I could hack 1 foot off the width of my table tops, based on the fact that it was 4×8 and my cross pieces were 3 feet. I forgot that I’d put the other pieces outside the cross pieces, so the under-structure is actually 3 feet 4 or so. Which I discovered when I was cutting the particle board and I thought “hmm, why did the saw just get slow and then speed up again”. I cut 3 or 4 feet into the board before I realized the mistake, so I went back and cut only 8 inches off, and put screws on both sides of the partial saw cut.
- There is no room to walk around one end of my table. I hope that doesn’t cause any problems.
Anyway, more about the kit I ordered. After exchanging a few emails with somebody at Pygmy Boats, I ordered the Arctic Tern Hi Volume. I don’t really need a high volume boat because I’m not carrying overnight gear, but the deck is an inch higher and I figured it would help get my size 11+ feet in. The boat is pretty similar to my existing Skerry RMX in size, and it has a hard chine. I’ve already started experimenting with leaned turns, so I’m looking forward to doing that with a hard chine boat. I did not opt for the Silver Tip epoxy, because I am not clear that the hundred dollars extra would really be worth it. I also didn’t opt for overnight shipping, since it would add another $300 to the cost. I did buy the optional bulkhead and hatch kit – I had considered skipping those and just buying some inflatable floatation bags for the bow and stern, again because I don’t use it for overnight travel, but I figured it couldn’t hurt to have them. I also went for the foot brace studs that you cement to the inside, instead of the standard ones that you drill through the sides. And considering how I like the built in thigh braces on my Skerry, I also ordered the “key hole” braces for this one. For some strange reason, I only ordered one hand toggle. I’ll have to email them to see if they’ll throw in a second one.
I can’t wait for the kit to arrive!
That’s a gorgeous kayak. The price is much more reasonable than I had expected, too.
Could you get the Silver Tip epoxy after the fact, if you decide it’s worth it?
What a beautiful piece of work. How long do you think it will take you to build it?
Ian, the epoxy gets into the process fairly early, so I don’t think you can switch after you’ve started. Also, the price of a basic kit (which doesn’t include epoxy or fibreglas) is $640 and a full kit is $875, so I assume that means that the epoxy is around $200, or $300 for Silver Tip, so it would be expensive to change my mind.
Elizabeth, the web site says around 70 hours of work spread out over 3 to 8 weeks, since you spend a lot of time doing one small thing and then waiting for a few days for the epoxy to dry. Since I’m a bit of a klutz, I expect to be on the high side of that.
If you really hate circular saws, look at this:
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_00921806000P?vName=Tools&cName=Bench+Power+Tools&sName=Table+Saws
It folds up, so it doesn’t have to take up space when you’re not using it. Although mine lives in the garage with a towel over it and I use it as a workbench.
Nice, straight cuts, good fence. I’m not usually a Craftsman fan, but I love mine.
My dad has an amazing table saw. I’m hoping I can hold out until he decides he doesn’t need it any more, and gives it to me. And that then I can figure out how to get it over the border. Sad as it is, I don’t know my dad’s exact age, but I think he’s in his mid 70s. Apart from some hearing loss, he’s not a lot less active than he was 20 years ago, so I figure I’ve probably got 10 or 20 years to figure out the answer to that problem, though.