On Aug 22, 15:17, Taylor, William J wrote:
> Subject: RE: very belated bio
> C'mon John. We need details. What kind of boat, how long under
> construction, what tools etc.
Think I covered most of this answering Ed Bell, but not what tools...
#4, #5, and #7 planes - mostly the #4 for planing bevels & trimming
overlaps and general smoothing - I just got a #3 but haven't degunked
and sharpened it.
block planes, including the #160 (is that the right number? - the one
where the side comes off so you can use it as a rabbet plane - a very
useful plane), a #93 rabbet (which is the wrong one, but it's what I got
- lapstrake boats need a beveled, sloped rabbet called a gain cut near
the bows, for which you need a plane narrower than the rabbet, so I
really needed the #92. If I were building a serious seagoing boat I
guess I'd need a #10)(incidently, I can't imagine how to cut a gain with
a power tool).
Drills & screwdrivers (straight, since that seems to be what the makers
of bronze screws like). (still looking for a nice brace, and a long
auger for a couple of long holes yet to come).
A non-descript but old Disston crosscut, a new but dull backsaw, a
coping saw.
Some files and chisels - late model Stanleys :-(
A vast number of clamps.
A bandsaw (I know it's a powertool, but it'd be a lot harder building a
boat without it).
A measuring tape, a steel rule, 3 or 4 squares, a couple of bevel
squares, a framing square.
Seems like I'm forgetting stuff...it seems to take a bunch of tools to
build even a small boat.
> By the way welcome and the customary penalty for posting personal mail
> to the list is you have to shine the spittoons unless Paddy has come
> up with some other more disgusting job lately.
Given what I've read from O'deen, I think I'll happily polish the
spittoons afore he thinks of something worse.
John
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John McCoy mccoy@p... excp01@e... Motorola Inc Radio Products Group 8000
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