First timer here, and just got a V22
Posted: Wed May 23, 2012 6:16 am
Hi all, and thanks for having me here.
I am a first time sailor, I have been on a sailboat twice before, once on a sunfish 25 years ago and once on a cat 20 years ago.
My Uncle had a v22 sitting in his backyard that he decided he did not want there anymore and gave it to me. I am not sure of the year, but it has a pop top and the kicker mounts to the transom on the port side, it does not use one of those aluminum brackets to mount. It is a project that a friend of the family gave him and so forth. Upon inspection the hull, hatches and exterior bits look fine (of course it needs a good prime and paint, but all in all not bad. The interior has been gutted so I am starting from scratch with no idea how things were originally outside of pictures on the internet.
Run down of what i can tell it will need.
Weather stripping for the windows
replacement front window
V berth rebuilt
Left bench top rebuilt
main berth / galley seats
table top / main berth center
electrical refit / new lights, radio, power plug in ect
Decide how to deal with the under cockpit area.
Plans
Build an access in to the V berth for battery storage, and put some of the flotation foam in there as well
Hinge the seat on the left bench for storage
Hinge the galley seats
build an area under the rear cockpit access panel for gas tank hold downs
some new wood trim
Fit as much foam as i can under the rear cockpit, and keep it level with bench seat and galley seats
a few questions,
The forward supports for the pop top are missing i think, are they anything special, or will just aluminium or stainless tubing work, and what is the length of the originals?
The table hardware is missing as well, any suggestions on what to use for replacement parts?
Also, as the interior is gutted, I have no idea how the orginal table worked. I can tell from pics that there was a removeable center support, and i see on the boat there is a little ledge sticking inward on the hull, at about the right height for the table edge to rest on. IF I am correct that that is what the ledge is for, how did the table top attach to it.
Any detailed pics of the table and how it works would be great.
As for doing the repairs, I have worked a fair amount in wood (have built 2 houses, and have remodeled my last 2 on my own) and have some experience in fiberglass ( have built a glass bodied T-Bucket) So I am fairly sure I can do the work to the boat. I just have nearly no experience repairing a boat like this, and zero experience with how sailboats are laid out. So any help or suggestions would be great.
the materials i plan on using for the repairs are
Treated Plywood for the seats and berth repairs with a birch top lamminated to the table top / center berth
fiberglass weave and epoxy resin over all wood, except the table / center berth
Cedar for the misc trim that needs to be replaced.
Thanks again,
Travis
Oh, and this boat will see 99% of its time in the st. Croix river in minnesota doing weekend over nights, and pleasure cruises to get dinner at one of the towns on the river. So no ocean time, or great lakes time. Maybe a trip to one of the larger lakes in the area, but not to often i would think.
I am a first time sailor, I have been on a sailboat twice before, once on a sunfish 25 years ago and once on a cat 20 years ago.
My Uncle had a v22 sitting in his backyard that he decided he did not want there anymore and gave it to me. I am not sure of the year, but it has a pop top and the kicker mounts to the transom on the port side, it does not use one of those aluminum brackets to mount. It is a project that a friend of the family gave him and so forth. Upon inspection the hull, hatches and exterior bits look fine (of course it needs a good prime and paint, but all in all not bad. The interior has been gutted so I am starting from scratch with no idea how things were originally outside of pictures on the internet.
Run down of what i can tell it will need.
Weather stripping for the windows
replacement front window
V berth rebuilt
Left bench top rebuilt
main berth / galley seats
table top / main berth center
electrical refit / new lights, radio, power plug in ect
Decide how to deal with the under cockpit area.
Plans
Build an access in to the V berth for battery storage, and put some of the flotation foam in there as well
Hinge the seat on the left bench for storage
Hinge the galley seats
build an area under the rear cockpit access panel for gas tank hold downs
some new wood trim
Fit as much foam as i can under the rear cockpit, and keep it level with bench seat and galley seats
a few questions,
The forward supports for the pop top are missing i think, are they anything special, or will just aluminium or stainless tubing work, and what is the length of the originals?
The table hardware is missing as well, any suggestions on what to use for replacement parts?
Also, as the interior is gutted, I have no idea how the orginal table worked. I can tell from pics that there was a removeable center support, and i see on the boat there is a little ledge sticking inward on the hull, at about the right height for the table edge to rest on. IF I am correct that that is what the ledge is for, how did the table top attach to it.
Any detailed pics of the table and how it works would be great.
As for doing the repairs, I have worked a fair amount in wood (have built 2 houses, and have remodeled my last 2 on my own) and have some experience in fiberglass ( have built a glass bodied T-Bucket) So I am fairly sure I can do the work to the boat. I just have nearly no experience repairing a boat like this, and zero experience with how sailboats are laid out. So any help or suggestions would be great.
the materials i plan on using for the repairs are
Treated Plywood for the seats and berth repairs with a birch top lamminated to the table top / center berth
fiberglass weave and epoxy resin over all wood, except the table / center berth
Cedar for the misc trim that needs to be replaced.
Thanks again,
Travis
Oh, and this boat will see 99% of its time in the st. Croix river in minnesota doing weekend over nights, and pleasure cruises to get dinner at one of the towns on the river. So no ocean time, or great lakes time. Maybe a trip to one of the larger lakes in the area, but not to often i would think.