Well this has been a good week for work on the boat. Sunday I removed the old shifter in the cockpit This was no easy task as corrosion had pretty much frozen it in place. About 10 minutes of hacking with a heavy duty Milwaukee sawzall with a 12 inch metal cutting blade finally did it in. with the old one out, I realized the hole was too big for the new shifter. Not good. Fortunately I had a few small hunks of teak in storage and shaped one of them into a plate that fit over the old hole, and drilled a smaller hole through the middle for the new shifter/throttle assembly. I epoxied this directly over the old hole and then it was ready for installation.
Monday, Lou came down to the boat and installed my used Icom 710 SSB radio and tuner. Lou is an old HAM radio operator who kind of reminds me of my grandfather. he's really knowledgeable about radios and ran all new cables for the power, tuner and antenna(back stay). With this I should be able to communicate and get weather within around a 4000 mile range. Someday I will get a modem so that I can send emails as well.
Tuesday, Kevin came and began work replacing the forward bulkhead. The new bulkhead will be around an inch thick and should do the job. really all it does is keep the chain in the chain locker and support the two sampson posts on either side of the bowsprit. As of today, he is close to done. which means the boat is nearly back together.
Also this week, I received the TV/'DVD I ordered from amazon that will mount on the main bulkhead in the salon. Its only about 16'', but it will be nice to watch a movie on the boat, and it runs off 12 volts.
The next step is bring the boat to the boatyard for a haul out and bottom job. I think the transducer may need replacing as well. She has virtually no bottom paint left at the moment, and has grown a pretty impressive beard in the last month since she was sling-hauled for the survey.
There's still the rigging and refrigeration that need a little attention, but I'm happy with the progress so far. I've been try to get help from some of the tradesman I know not only because they're skilled guys, but because I'm working full time and if I try and do it all myself, I'll either screw it up, never finish or both, and I really want to keep the momentum up.
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