Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Looking Like a Good Day to Paint

Whoa!!  When we got up this morning it was cool without a breath of wind... I was excited to get to the work yard and see what might happen.  I knew that they would not start right away because of the cold but by 9:00 a.m. it was time get moving.  The timing was perfect.

 
Starting the first coat.


First coat on a perfect day.


When I got to the yard the crew was just mixing the paint and cleaning the surface to be painted one last time.  It was time to paint!!!

 
The tone of the color is matching.


All this means that we are moving toward a launch date!!  The bottom paint typically goes on in one to three days and we can splash almost immediately!






This is a pretty good indication that we are getting close as well... the barrier coat is on the rudder.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

More Together Each Day!

Here we go again with a work yard update!

Starting to look really good!


This has been a different few days for me since I can't get on the boat to finish or start any projects.  Faith is looking good though.  We went out to breakfast this morning and then stopped by the work yard to view the progress.  The primer is on and they had sanded a bit on that so that Monday should be looking good for further painting.  This may help my lack of patience... not that I want to get ahead of myself here.

This is going to work!!

Painting a boat is a slow process and it needs to stay that way.  One small issue we have is that after thirty days in the yard the daily cost goes up so we are wanting to speed up the time to get this done.  Having said that it is still better to take ones' time in painting if you want it to last.

While we were at it I marked the chain every twenty feet.

I installed a new faucet, as I mentioned, in the forward head but did not have a chance to take a picture of the MUCH improved utility that will give the head.  The old faucet was corroded and the place where the water was supposed to come out was almost completely blocked with a calcified build up.  This is about as updated as I can be right now... more to follow. 

Saturday, December 7, 2013

The Work Yard


The new name logo.

We have done much of the mechanical work and right now I am unable to access the boat so I have a few days off!  The painters are working on the upper blue stripe and have come to a stage where the sanding is completed and the primer coat has been sprayed on.  I will sneak into the yard tomorrow and get a picture of the progress.  

Should be smooooth running.


It is a beautiful thing!!

 The mechanical parts look great and if it is as well aligned as it looks we should not have much issue with how it works.  We are actually talking about having a shake down sail in a few weeks.  The mechanical part of the autopilot is also pretty much done and I was half way through putting new faucets in the heads.  The rudder was getting a barrier coat on it today as well and we had a good look at just how much work has been done on it this morning.  It looks pretty solidly fixed at this point.  Any day now all that is out of the boat will go back in or on and it will be ready for launching.  We can do a lot of work at the dock while we get ready for what follows.

It looked even better the last time I saw it!!

We are talking about our route south too.  I checked the probable routes this afternoon and am pondering the 2-3-4 day passages that are likely.  It is simply a matter of being ready for a longer passage and the new autopilot should help that considerably.      

Back in the Saddle Again

What a year we have had!

The motorhome tour of the U.S. was a fantastic first half.  Then we had the Pacific Northwest for the summer months and now we are back in Mexico to rejoin the boat (s/v Faith) For the cruising season.

As usual you don't just show up, splash the boat in the water and take off.  There are oodles of things that need attention before going anywhere.  


The rudder IS missing!!


Since I joined Sandy on Faith in 2008 there has been work aplenty.  To get ready to go that first summer was spent adding solar panels, rigging, containment and retention "stuff" and generally making ready for longer passages.  Every year we made both major and minor improvements to make Faith more comfortable and more capable as a cruising boat.  The second year we added the boat jewelry of the five boat unit windlass to raise and lower the anchor successfully EVERY time it was needed.  Other improvements were relatively minor or incremental.  This year it is time to fix some long standing issues and make with a little bit of prettier too.


The drive shaft out of the boat.


Since we left Portland we had been plagued with a growling bearing noise in what I call the carrier bearing (just forward of the shaft seal) for the propeller shaft.  It has been annoying and until you take the whole assembly apart, from the transmission coupler to the stern tube, you can't realign it so that you have an effective repair.  There are lots of details I could insert here but for now suffice it to say that this is something that can only be done in a work yard out of the water.  We brought down from home NEW motor mounts (.75 boat units) to initiate this repair.  By balancing and stabilizing the shaking of the motor we stand a better chance of having less strain on the carrier bearing and the cutlass bearing.  Standing at the propeller in the yard you could move the shaft up and down a bit... that is NOT how it is supposed to be... it should be stable in that bearing.  So, we have taken the shaft out of the boat and removed the bearings as well.  We ordered a new cutlass bearing by way of Puerto Vallarta and the work crew is now looking for a replacement or a rebuild for the carrier bearing.  

In this process we discovered that the rudder had developed cracks along its trailing edge.  This is because we have black bottom paint on it (and the rest of the bottom) to keep the marine life to a minimum.  You really get a slow boat if you allow the barnacles and grass to grow there.  Anyway, when we leave the boat out on the hard for the summer the heat builds up in the rudder from the sunlight hitting it all the time and it expanded and cracked.  This needed a fix so the rudder, that had to come off anyway to take the drive shaft out for repair, was taken off and sent to the shop for some work.  It will be a few days before that comes back so we have time to put the mechanical parts back together and get aligned properly.


Faith out on the Hard looking good!!


A boat is meant to be in the water and when you take it out, especially in the conditions we face here in Mexico, you are tampering with so many things.

Take for instance the batteries we use to store the sunlight we have in abundance to power our electrical "stuff".  Without the batteries we would have to stay hooked up to the dock to power our refrigerator, for example.  When we left the boat after a brief visit last November I had hooked up a smaller solar panel to keep the batteries alive but probably under estimated the draw down that they would experience.  I did not want to keep our larger panels attached because we would not be around to monitor the batteries' water levels and I did not want to fry them.  Altogether we have 8 (yes, eight) six volt (golf cart) batteries as the house bank (that's roughly 800 amps of power) and one 12 volt start battery.  The 6 volters are wired to give deep charge 12 volt power for our electrical needs.  When we came back to Faith the batteries appeared to be flat dead.  Yikes.  That's a full boat unit to replace them!!!  So, I hooked up the larger solar panels again and for the last several days have been monitoring their slow rise back to useful power.  It may not work but since we are in the yard and without any current draw it seems worthwhile to try to resurrect them.

There are more projects that need doing:  we bought an electric head (that's a toilet) for the forward bathroom that I will need to install, we brought a wind generator to install to add to the solar panels, there are several small projects like a boat name graphic to replace the peeling one that came with the boat and so forth.  One large expense this year is that we should and will repaint the bottom to keep the marine critters at bay.  In addition, we have decided to have the upper blue stripe repainted to spruce up the look of the boat over all.  A couple of seasons ago we had rebuilt the life lines.  They now look so good that some of the rest of the boat needs the spruce up.  Yeah, it's a lot like dominoes.  Oh yeah, and THEN we get to put order in the below decks to start to live aboard again!!  I miss the boat and the life it gives us, so getting back on board will be a wonderful thing.


The chaos below deck while we are away!!!

Note: One boat unit is a thousand dollars.


The next updates will likely focus on how all this will come together.