BBA December 2011 student launch – first two photos

Michael Tyler’s catboat 'Lucie' at the BBA student launch December 2011 David Campbell (waving) in his Caledonian Yawl at the BBA student launch 7th December

The Boat Building Academy staffer Emma Brice has kindly sent over a couple of photos she took at this year’s somewhat wintry-looking student launch. I hope it wasn’t too cold down at Lyme!

The catboat above left was built by Michael Tyler; the Caledonian Yawl above right was built by David Campbell.

I gather the Academy’s tutors were particularly pleased to finally launch Gary Thompson’s Haven 12 ½ built during the September 2010 course – it couldn’t be launched in June because of strong winds.

Thanks Emma!

 

Nick Smith motor launch Bella – fitting the engine and shaft

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Nick Smith motor launch Bella drilling the shaft log

Nick Smith motor launch Bella ply template holding necessary from motor, shaft line, mounts Nick Smith motor launch glueing tapered engine beds Nick Smith motor launch Bella fitting stern tube, shaft and engine

Nick Smith motor launch Bella fitting stern tube, shaft and engine Nick Smith motor launch Bella after deck khaya mahogany king plank and cover boards, iroko planks

Nick Smith and colleagues has been fitting the engine to the motor launch Bella – it’s quite a process as these photos and his notes below reveal – and fitting the aft deck, which is now looking very special.

Find more posts about Nick’s boats here.

The photos are in order, from the top and numbered left to right in Nick’s notes. Here’s what hehas to say:

1 Drilling the shaft log to take the stern tube. Notice the rudimenary drilling  jig, which is simple and effective; I use the same method to drill through the keel deadwood, from the outside in.

2 The ply template holds all the necessary information taken from the motor, dimension of shaft line, engine mounts etc. The old boys would use a string line to line up the shaft, but I use straight edges – they have to be right and don’t get the false readings that can happen when you inadvertently lean on the string with your knee.

3 Once happy with the shaft angle I can glue on the tapered engine beds. These are angled exactly to the shaft angle. Now we are getting somewhere!

4 Simple as that! Fit the stern tube, slide the shaft in, lift the engine into place, sort the engines’ fore and aft position, adjust the four mounts to line up the couplings exactly,drill off for the coach screws to hold the flexible mountings down, and then bolt down. Add the flexy coupling and bolt shaft to gearbox. A good day’s work.

5 As 4 above.

6 Whilst the stern gear engineers were knocking up their bit, I got on with other jobs, including laying the after deck, making up the locker front and locker door, and some paintwork, including varnish on the seats. I’ve got a gloss on them already, even only after one coat of 50/50 and one full coat. Here’s the after deck, khaya mahogany king plank and cover boards, iroko planks, payed with black polysulphide compound. The mahogany is to be fully varnished and the deck planking is to be fed with a linseed oil-white spirit mixture.

Bella is six to eight away from completion, but as the old boatbuilders in Salcombe used to say ‘a boat’s only finished when it goes away’. Looking at my timesheets, so far I have been building her for 13 weeks in workshop time, so I’m reasonably pleased with the progress.

More photos next week.

Cheers

Nick

Nick comes from Devon, learned boatbuilding the traditional way and specialises in new builds in clinker and carvel for sail, motor and rowing power from 8ft to 28ft with a special emphasis on West Country style and design, and also takes on repairs and refits from 25ft to 50ft. These days he’s based in Hampshire, and can be contacted by email at nick_smith_boatbuilder@yahoo.com and by phone on phone on 07786 693370.

Seamew, Burnham Scow No 230

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Seamew Burnham scow Seamew, Burnham scow Seamew, Burnham Scow, sailing dinghy

Seamew, Burnham scow, sailing dinghy Seamew, Burnham Scow, sailing dinghy

Seamew, Burnham Scow, sailing dinghy

Seamew, built by Stebbings of Burnham on Crouch in 1953, and repaired and restored in Bob Hinks’ workshop

Clea Rawinsky has been busy fulfilling a long-held ambition to own and sail a Burnham Scow, with the help of boatbuilder Bob Hinks (link one, link two) and their mutual friend Mark. Here’s the story as she tells it:

I first saw Seamew, dusty and forgotten, in a boat shed near my home years ago. I recognised the class easily: she was a Burnham Scow: an 11ft 3in clinker-built sailing dinghy.

One of the local yacht clubs, the Royal Burnham, adopted the class for their cadet section some 50 years ago, and a small number of them continue to grace the River Crouch. However, Burnham Scows are very rarely found for sale and tend to be passed down through families.

Seamew had split planks, a bashed-in gunwhale and had obviously enjoyed a great history – but she also looked like she hadn’t been touched in decades. She needed more work than I was capable of, but just knowing she existed allowed me to dream.

Then, last year, I was introduced to Bob Hinks. He and our mutual friend, Mark, had a cracking day out sailing Cirrus, Bob’s strip-plank built 20ft day-sailer with an electric inboard motor. Bob was clearly a craftsman and I was intrigued by his modest view of his obviously outstanding talent as a boat builder.

One day I was showing Mark and Bob my own boat, a 26ft Polaris. She was in storage awaiting a new owner and by chance happened to be chocked off right next to Seamew. Both guys saw, as I had, the potential in the little elm-on-oak relic. As if by magic, Bob was heard to say how he’d been looking for a winter project.

That was last autumn. There and then the three of us tacitly agreed we’d be sailing her next summer. It has been a whirlwind time making it happen.

Seamew went to Bob’s workshop in London, a perfect, centrally-heated space at the bottom of his garden. We all chipped in but it was Bob’s skill that defined the project. He stripped out the damaged wood and made up the list of materials required to rebuild her.

The new timber arrived just before Christmas and Bob set-to, teaming planks and making up fittings that we couldn’t buy, sometimes using the workshop in his former company, Asylum. He used his own bandsaw to cut notches in a bronze bar that was destined to become our bespoke centre-plate handle.

He kept us up-to-date on the progress by regularly emailing new images, showing the skeleton of the boat, fresh copper fastenings, the next new plank, the new thwart knees and a sumptuously rich finish on the mahogany rudder cheeks.

As if the project wasn’t rolling along quickly enough, Bob moved up a gear when I mentioned there was an opportunity to have the boat at the RYA Volvo Dinghy Show. It was a bit of a long shot: the Royal Burnham had space booked at the show at the Alexandra Palace show in early March, but didn’t have a boat to put on the stand. Bob was more than willing and the club was too, as it turned out.

In the end she looked fantastic on the stand, and drew a lot of attention. I found myself thinking of her shipwrights, back in 1950s Burnham in the old Chapel Road boatshed… I fancy they may have smiled to see her, almost a lifetime later, under the bright lights, on show, up in the big smoke. In fact, it wasn’t her first experience of brief fame – she was put on show at the Earls Court Boat Show, 57 years ago.

Roll on the warmer weather and a champagne launch some time in May.

Thanks Clea – that’s a very cheering story. It’s particularly nice that you managed to get some history on the boat itself as well as the class.

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