Saturday, 31 December 2016

FInally! heat in the shop!

4 years in the making, we can build and not see our breath from the cold! Tools are warmer too...
33k BTU direct vent wall heater is enough as the shop is fully insulated; filler can cure, paint won't freeze and we can finish off the first replica.


Can't say enough about this company, job done in 4 hours and not a glitch.  Only company to actually come out and quote, and their price was literally half of the others i called. Neighbours likely thought our furnace had quit!


Nice unit barely protrudes into the workspace


Sealed combustion unit, from an American company. 


Template time, installation starting


All done, now for the gas plumbing. Old buried gas line to a pool heater from the meter cut costs further


Just need to wire a receptacle for the fan power, and its done. Extension is fine for now, and it throws the heat! Shop went from 40 to mid 60s in an hour and a half. 
Life is good!

Friday, 30 December 2016

New (old) planer

Tired of the newer Rigid planer, too much aluminum and plastic, but mostly the replaceable blades that cant be sharpened and at $60 a set now we began looking for an older cast iron unit to take its place.  Been looking for one off and on for years, and got lucky this December. New blades, no motor, and looking for a quick rebuild, unit is in perfect shape with no broken casting. 


Unit as found, ready to be tilted into the trailer. Well over 300lbs even without the electric motor


Will need a new duct for chips and waste to connect to dust collection, and will have panels sheared for the base to close in, and to mount the switchbox on. New paint and bearings are in order after its been completed mechanically






Original folder from the factory in Drummondville, Quebec sometime late 50s or early 60s



Another 130 unit, complete. 2 speed infeed gearbox showing. 

New Wanigan in old Pine

Time to drag out the form and put one together for the Gr8 homeroom teacher. Good teachers just make you want to build...


Leftover big pine from what was used to plank the form. A really kool piece was kept for the lid



Old pine sides, white cedar ribs and western red cedar planking



Making the turn around the bottom


Planked and ready to lift from the form. 


Finished, sanded and ready for tung oil


That satisfying moment when the oil hits the sanded wood


Oiled inside and out, 3 coats rubbed and paste furniture wax rather than varnish


The apprentice oiling the lid next


Walnut, pine and WRC


Second coat of oil soaking in


Ready for furniture wax


The lid, complete with blue staining from Pine Wilt disease,
more here:

  • Pine wilt is a lethal disease caused by a native nematode (Bursaphelenchus xylophilus), vectored to trees by a wood borer insect–the pine sawyer beetle (Monochamus spp.).
  • Rapid change in needle color from green to gray-green to brown or light tan, beginning in late summer
  • Wood from recently affected trees is very dry, brittle and lacks any resin accumulation when cut. No evidence of exit holes, sawdust, or pitch tubes associated with bark beetles or wood borers in branches or the trunk
  • The wood is discolored by blue stain fungi
  • The blue stain fungusGrosmannia clavigera, is a species of sac fungus. It spreads to lodgepole pineponderosa pineDouglas-fir, and whitebark pine trees from the body and a special structure in the heads of mountain pine beetles. The blue stain fungus has evolved a relationship with mountain pine beetles that allow them to travel from tree to tree on a special structure in the beetle’s heads and stops the tree from producing resin to pitch out or kill the beetle, encouraging the pine beetle infestation
  • The blue stain fungus spores germinate and produce a thread like mass (mycelium) that colonizes the phloem and sapwood. Fungal spores are usually blown away by wind but blue-stain spores are "sticky." This process eventually blocks the nutrient-conducting columns of the tree draining the trees of their nutrients eventually causing the tree to starve to death.[4] The symptoms and signs of blue stain fungus are a blue-gray discoloration of sapwood in wedge shapes of recently killed trees

Wednesday, 14 December 2016

Canvas for the Chestnut

Repairs are done, new canvas going on to be filled and painted in the spring, along with a new keel and final coats of varnish on the inside


Long a fan of the upside down method, tall sawhorses make it a more comfortable process


New roll of #12, enough for the next 4 boats


Stretching tight


The immovable object, fine while the weather is nice!


Nice and tight, fastened at the rails 


Almost done


Preservative, a necessary steop



Zinc concentration has been reduced due government regulation, from 8% to 2% but strong smell remains



Done and drying, waiting to be filled