This is my really cool customized camping cooler for Diana.
Here shown holding what it usually does-- iced tea-- is the interior of the cooler as I modified it. The divider is Plexiglass left over from the cabin windows. It slides down into place between Starboard fiddles mounted in 5200 (to seal the screw holes so water doesn't get into the foam core; it does not stick to Starboard). The side corners are cut out to let water reach the drain fitting, a plastic one I installed in the forward end. The drain deposits its dribble into a PVC receptacle in the floor of this compartment which in turn carries the dribble forward into the bilge. The drain in the cooler is cut off flush with the bottom so the cooler will sit level (and thus structurally sound) on a flat surface like the dock.
Beyond the divider Starboard fiddles hold a grilled shelf for smaller items. The bagged ice goes under the grill. (This cooler is not big or strong enough to hold a full block. Nevertheless, with a plug in the drain it will hold some residue of ice-- not merely cold water-- for 5 days.) With this configuration, there is a place that remains free of ice cubes to hold taller things, like full gallons of water or iced tea, wine bottles, etc. The smaller stuff goes above the ice in back.
The grill is a leftover section from the light baffle material I got when installing a work light in my mother's kitchen. It is not very strong and was annoying to cut, as a jigsaw only shattered it and a bandsaw did only a little less damage. I resorted to cutting it by hand with a very fine hacksaw blade. Of course the sides are not parallel, due to the cooler's shape, and the back edge is slightly rounded. And then there is the issue of ensuring that the square holes, when cut through, allow enough support along the fiddles. As can be seen I got it aligned so that one long strake rides on each side fiddle.
The cooler is not a 'marine'-spec one but a standard Coleman '5-day'
campers'-spec one. The marine ones all have top hinges along the side.
As seen here Diana needs one hinged from the end-- or, as here, not at
all.
The cooler sits under the ladder; its top is covered by the bottom step (which I personally never use, as I step on the quarter berth edge when entering or leaving the cockpit). This step is hinged at the back. I do not yet have it rigged but I want to have a Fastpin slid through the ladder side(s) to hold up the step. Then one can lift the cooler lid without having to hold up the weight of the step. The step does not protrude far enough beyond the upper one to allow anyone to accidentally step on it and break it or bend the Fastpin. If it's pinned up, you will see there is no step below (or just the cooler lid) and step onto the quarter berth instead.
The pencil scribble on the not-yet-painted right side (left in photo) is marking where the recessed red LED footlight will go. With the step and lid down, it illuminates the step. With the step up, it illuminates the cooler.
The heavy fiddles screwed to the sides support the step, which is 1/2" plywood with a 3/4" step plate epoxied to the front edge. It was varnished about 7 years ago with Captain's Varnish and is still holding up well.
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Restoration, remodeling, and revival of a 1974 Hunter 25 sailboat by John Cherubini Jr (whose dad designed it) - or: what happens when a professional boatbuilder and sailboat rigger rebuilds a classic yacht.
Showing posts with label cooler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooler. Show all posts
21 September 2012
24 August 2012
Some inconveniences are beyond counting
I once told my young brother-in-law, as he was building some plastic model airplane and complaining about glue on his fingertips, that to do a good job sometimes you have to love your project more than you care for your self. This is especially true when it comes to convenience-- after all, most of the things we love are patently inconvenient. And yet we pursue them anyway; and in this pursuit is how we acknowledge their value to us.
This photo is not great; it's intended to show the nice fat mahogany splinter I got in my foot. (How? --I wasn't even barefoot.) In this one week I got this splinter and another as well, tore my fingertips on a jigsaw blade (it was not running), jammed the meat of my hand in the drill-press chuck and mysteriously gashed my leg which bled all over the project in process.
The West Marine sticker is on my daughter's laptop.
Here is the top of the cabin, with no hatch or hatch shroud in place, the day I was fastening down the new hatch-slider rails. The green tape along a piece of wood is a dam to keep epoxy from coursing down the side of the cabin and over the windows (already let that happen once, so never again!). I had noticed a stickiness whenever I was kneeling a certain way but in the semi-mad rush to get the sticks into position and screwed down I attributed it to something stuck to my leg. Only when I was done the most urgent part of it did I happen to notice the red stuff, which I then concluded was blood.
That's the foredeck's hatch coaming in the distance. At the time of this photo the hatch shroud was being used to cover up that opening-- that's it even farther beyond.
Below you can see something of the main cabin, the compression post, the settee and head trim, and whatnot.
So I took this photo downwards at my leg, probably just to record the solution to the mystery.
Here I am standing up on the quarter berth, my other foot on the ladder step. The quarter berth is (at this time) the current lumberyard. The gap below my foot is the 'wet locker,' the one place inside the accommodation that goes straight to the hull skin itself. Over this I would like to make a panel of slats, like the white-pine ceiling we make for C44s. On the side of the ladder, behind my leg, goes the stainless-steel double hook to hang up wet foulies. On the teak cabin face behind me is already another of these hooks.
You can see the cooler under the bottom shelf of the ladder; its cover is accessible when you lift the shelf. A Fastpin stuck through a hole in the ladder side holds it up. It's made so that if one should descend the ladder while the shelf is up the shelf won't stick out so far so as to catch a heel and break off-- although it does mean there won't be a second shelf in place for the one coming down.
Also two sections of the three-part cabin sole are visible here. At the time of this photo the center section is just rough plywood-- it'll be varnished mahogany later.
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This photo is not great; it's intended to show the nice fat mahogany splinter I got in my foot. (How? --I wasn't even barefoot.) In this one week I got this splinter and another as well, tore my fingertips on a jigsaw blade (it was not running), jammed the meat of my hand in the drill-press chuck and mysteriously gashed my leg which bled all over the project in process.
The West Marine sticker is on my daughter's laptop.
Here is the top of the cabin, with no hatch or hatch shroud in place, the day I was fastening down the new hatch-slider rails. The green tape along a piece of wood is a dam to keep epoxy from coursing down the side of the cabin and over the windows (already let that happen once, so never again!). I had noticed a stickiness whenever I was kneeling a certain way but in the semi-mad rush to get the sticks into position and screwed down I attributed it to something stuck to my leg. Only when I was done the most urgent part of it did I happen to notice the red stuff, which I then concluded was blood.
That's the foredeck's hatch coaming in the distance. At the time of this photo the hatch shroud was being used to cover up that opening-- that's it even farther beyond.
Below you can see something of the main cabin, the compression post, the settee and head trim, and whatnot.

Here I am standing up on the quarter berth, my other foot on the ladder step. The quarter berth is (at this time) the current lumberyard. The gap below my foot is the 'wet locker,' the one place inside the accommodation that goes straight to the hull skin itself. Over this I would like to make a panel of slats, like the white-pine ceiling we make for C44s. On the side of the ladder, behind my leg, goes the stainless-steel double hook to hang up wet foulies. On the teak cabin face behind me is already another of these hooks.
You can see the cooler under the bottom shelf of the ladder; its cover is accessible when you lift the shelf. A Fastpin stuck through a hole in the ladder side holds it up. It's made so that if one should descend the ladder while the shelf is up the shelf won't stick out so far so as to catch a heel and break off-- although it does mean there won't be a second shelf in place for the one coming down.
Also two sections of the three-part cabin sole are visible here. At the time of this photo the center section is just rough plywood-- it'll be varnished mahogany later.
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