Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Today's milling


Rough Hewn

Recommended Posts

3 hours ago, ucoulddoit said:


Lovely looking boat. We went to see the Fife regatta in the Clyde last year and I came away dreaming of owning a traditional rigged boat. Very envious and looks like a nice sailing area. 
 

Andrew

 

Realised the last few posts are veering further and further off the thread title of ‘Today’s Milling’. But I guess Steve will sort that out if necessary? Anyway, here’s another.

 

Following on from the last post, the photos below are the nearest I came to having a traditionally built and rigged wooden boat. Various models made over 40 years ago. All of which looked great sailing on a boating pond in a light breeze, apart from the clinker built longboat which is just a static model. All these were made or finished while away from home studying, without access to a workshop, so they were a way of satisfying the urge to be making things with minimal tools. And a way of day dreaming of larger projects for the future.

 

First two photos are the best model and last to be made, 18 inches hull length carved out of jelutong. Very detailed, even the pulley blocks were carved out of small pieces of boxwood and the mast hoops for the mainsail were laminated from veneer. Gave that to my dad as thanks for all his support with boat building, education, etc.

 

479438379_Kingfisher1compressed.thumb.jpg.8ff3604b604bb14f381efefb2b9d005c.jpg

 

184253048_Kingfisher2compressed.thumb.jpg.5e9f66a24479d3ec4d31b06deb61fed6.jpg

 

Then the clinker longboat, just 12 inches long with planks made from veneer over a simple mould, exactly how a full size boat would be built. Anyone following the YouTube channel 'The art of boat building' which is making the dinghy for Acorn to Arabella?

1233860615_Longboatcompressed2.thumb.jpg.9b2bc51dbaf60045382b3d55072cd55a.jpg 

1772452796_Longboatmouldscompressed.thumb.jpg.de17b6a76639ccea28b2e2caacfa2198.jpg

 

510431649_Longboatplankingcompressed.thumb.jpg.d846d0ee6c7e2e7e0a573a10fd24d732.jpg

 

Then a Pearling Lugger carved out of pine. About 30 inches long including the bowsprit.

1931914533_Pearlingluggercompressed.thumb.jpg.c2e9f8a6018e8dee604dd072e8e2049e.jpg

 

And finally the largest at 30 inches long and first one made. A schooner with the hull carved out of balsa wood and sheathed in fiberglass. That one sailed superbly in a reasonable breeze. Sadly it's sails and rigging were destroyed years ago by our cat! One of my retirement jobs is to get it re-rigged so it can be sailed again once my grand children are a bit older.

1160314265_Arguscompressed.thumb.jpg.527023964b85293a4b30229cc1c762de.jpg

 

Would very happily have full sized versions of the first two models.

 

Andrew

  • Like 9
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Log in or register to remove this advert

4 hours ago, ucoulddoit said:

 

Realised the last few posts are veering further and further off the thread title of ‘Today’s Milling’. But I guess Steve will sort that out if necessary? Anyway, here’s another.

 

Following on from the last post, the photos below are the nearest I came to having a traditionally built and rigged wooden boat. Various models made over 40 years ago. All of which looked great sailing on a boating pond in a light breeze, apart from the clinker built longboat which is just a static model. All these were made or finished while away from home studying, without access to a workshop, so they were a way of satisfying the urge to be making things with minimal tools. And a way of day dreaming of larger projects for the future.

 

First two photos are the best model and last to be made, 18 inches hull length carved out of jelutong. Very detailed, even the pulley blocks were carved out of small pieces of boxwood and the mast hoops for the mainsail were laminated from veneer. Gave that to my dad as thanks for all his support with boat building, education, etc.

 

479438379_Kingfisher1compressed.thumb.jpg.8ff3604b604bb14f381efefb2b9d005c.jpg

 

184253048_Kingfisher2compressed.thumb.jpg.5e9f66a24479d3ec4d31b06deb61fed6.jpg

 

Then the clinker longboat, just 12 inches long with planks made from veneer over a simple mould, exactly how a full size boat would be built. Anyone following the YouTube channel 'The art of boat building' which is making the dinghy for Acorn to Arabella?

1233860615_Longboatcompressed2.thumb.jpg.9b2bc51dbaf60045382b3d55072cd55a.jpg 

1772452796_Longboatmouldscompressed.thumb.jpg.de17b6a76639ccea28b2e2caacfa2198.jpg

 

510431649_Longboatplankingcompressed.thumb.jpg.d846d0ee6c7e2e7e0a573a10fd24d732.jpg

 

Then a Pearling Lugger carved out of pine. About 30 inches long including the bowsprit.

1931914533_Pearlingluggercompressed.thumb.jpg.c2e9f8a6018e8dee604dd072e8e2049e.jpg

 

And finally the largest at 30 inches long and first one made. A schooner with the hull carved out of balsa wood and sheathed in fiberglass. That one sailed superbly in a reasonable breeze. Sadly it's sails and rigging were destroyed years ago by our cat! One of my retirement jobs is to get it re-rigged so it can be sailed again once my grand children are a bit older.

1160314265_Arguscompressed.thumb.jpg.527023964b85293a4b30229cc1c762de.jpg

 

Would very happily have full sized versions of the first two models.

 

Andrew


wonderful. You definitely need to get to sea again! Great models. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, trigger_andy said:

Maxed out the Mill with a big Birch. Surprisingly there was no rot at all. The mill worked harder with it than Oak. Some cracking colours too. 
 

Pics really don’t do it justice. Looks insipid and half rotten. 

15C1BD14-012A-414C-B3A2-D8619CCF336E.jpeg

464D8760-9B13-46B3-ABCB-6973F3F33A5A.jpeg

2A7BB370-5E02-4617-A25A-E557CA7CA09F.jpeg

91781B0D-9426-4365-A7F5-95C354FDF9A0.jpeg

Why , do you recon the birch was harder to mill than the oak Andy ?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, trigger_andy said:

Maxed out the Mill with a big Birch. Surprisingly there was no rot at all. The mill worked harder with it than Oak. Some cracking colours too. 
 

Pics really don’t do it justice. Looks insipid and half rotten. 

15C1BD14-012A-414C-B3A2-D8619CCF336E.jpeg

464D8760-9B13-46B3-ABCB-6973F3F33A5A.jpeg

2A7BB370-5E02-4617-A25A-E557CA7CA09F.jpeg

91781B0D-9426-4365-A7F5-95C354FDF9A0.jpeg

Lovely!  I have no idea why more birch logs don’t get offered for milling.  On the occasions I get birch logs the timber always sells quickly once dry.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Stubby said:

Why , do you recon the birch was harder to mill than the oak Andy ?

I know you were asking Andy but I would imagine the wood is a lot more fibrous thank oak. Makes it much harder to mill. Milling oak is a dream with a chainsaw compared to more fibrous stuff like pine or poplar. 👍

  • Like 3
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  •  

  • Featured Adverts

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

Articles

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.