Today I start on the deck. First task is to glue the back of the cockpit together. That took about 30 seconds. But since once that’s done, the next step is to start putting assembling the deck on the boat. So I took the time to remove the two seven inch high pieces that were screwed onto the temporary frames when I first turned the hull upside down to work on the outside.
Continue reading “Kayak Construction: Flipping the hull”
Category: Revelation
DSLR 2: The cheap way out?
Hey, I’ve got a Minolta Maxxum 7000 film camera which my Dad gave me when he bought a brand new Minolta 7D, and it’s a pretty nice. And I’ve got three lenses for it, one good Minolta one and a couple of cheap-ass Sigma Tek ones I bought on eBay. Now that Minolta is no more, Minolta 7Ds are pretty cheap on eBay. Do you think a used Minolta 7D would be a good option? I have no doubt the Minolta lens would work with it, but I wonder if the Sigma Tek telephoto will auto focus?
DSLR?
I can’t find my Nikon Coolpix 8800. I’ve looked all over the house and the garage for it, and I can only assume that the underwear gnomes took it.
So, assuming I was to buy a replacement, what should I get? Things I liked about the Coolpix 8800:
- SLR form factor
- 10x optical zoom, from 35mm equivalent 33 to 330mm
- 8 megapixel
Things I hate, hate, hate about this camera:
- Fake SLR – when you look through the eyepiece, you’re not looking through the glass, you’re looking at a tiny low resolution LCD.
- When you depress the shutter half way, it will lock in the focus or the exposure but not both
- It utterly failed horribly to focus up close. You’d frame the picture, make sure everything you wanted to be in focus was in focus, click the shutter, and then it would whirr as tried both extremes of the focus, and finally take the picture when absolutely nothing in frame was in focus.
So, is there any point at looking at anything other than the Digital Rebel XTi?
Meta: New blog category
I added a new category to the blog, “Kayak Construction” and moved all my construction project postings to that category. Mostly that’s for my own benefit, so I can find them again if I need to. But like all WordPress blogs, each category has it’s own RSS feed so if you want, you can just subscribe to those posts if you really want to. (The only time I used that separate feed capability is when LUGOR set up a “Planet” feed of LUGOR members blogs, and I just gave them the URL for the feed for the “Geekery” category.)
Kayak Construction: Paul reads the instructions
Remember how yesterday I expressed surprise that after coating the cloth, it was textured rather than smooth? Well, I guess I should have done a bit better job of reading ahead in the instructions. I mentioned that today I was going to put on the keel reinforcement “tape”. Well, it turns out that you roller on a “fill coat” of epoxy over the whole hull, and then put the tape on and stick it down with more epoxy. And then when that all dries (tomorrow, it appears), you do another fill coat. So I guess it ends up smooth after all.
The instructions just say to
roll on a coat of epoxy over the entire hull to fill the weave of the cloth. (Do not squeegee fill coats.)
but when I do that, I ended up with bubbles and foam, so I went over the coat with a paint brush to smooth it out. Once again, I wish the instructions had mentioned things like this.
Then I put on the keel tape, and wet it down and stuck it down with the paint brush. That went relatively straight forwardly.
Then I went around the boat again with the paint brush and painted out bubbles and drips from the keel tape. Until I find my real camera, there is no way you could see any difference between today and yesterday with the cell phone camera, so I didn’t bother.
Tomorrow I do another fill coat. Then it’s time to start the deck panels. And maybe I’ll have a few days without sticky hands.