Kathy prefers a bench seat to a bucket slider. A few years ago we removed the bucket and installed a fixed double-contour bench seat. For kneeling and trim weight purposes we positioned the bench seat as far back as possible.
P9260001 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The seat looks uncomfortably close to the bar, but Kathy uses a partially deflated Therma-Rest pad as a seat cushion. I love those myself, but they are so lightweight the pad will take flight on windy days when not anchored by a paddler’s weight.
P9260002 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Easily resolved; remove the seat and install two webbing straps, loose enough to slip in the deflated pad. A couple lengths of 1” webbing, a few SS staples and presto, seat pad keeper straps.
P9260003 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Deflate the pad, slip it under the keeper straps, open the nozzle and let it partially reinflate, get comfy. The webbing straps curl the pad around the front rail of the seat for more pleasant kneeling.
P9260008 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I’d like to replace those two long webbing loops used for the back band straps with 316 stainless mini D-rings pop riveted under the inwale. Enough so that I ordered a few (I had one left). Probably should have ordered 10, I’m sure I’ll eventually need more.
P9300038 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B072PQNGRW?ps ... ct_detailsI think those are much easier to clip a back band strap to than a loop of 1” webbing. Kathy’s canoe, Kathy’s call on whether to replace the webbing loops with D-rings.
The Sundowner bow is getting more comfortable and functional by the day. We had installed minicel knee bumpers below the inwales when we put in the bench seat, and there was shop discussion about adding thin minicel slabs to the existing pieces to cover the still-bare ouchy aluminum inwale.
P9260014 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I don’t remember where we landed on the yea and nays of that discussion. Doesn’t matter, this is what’s known as a Command Decision, as in “There’s no one around to tell me not to”.
That decision was made easier by Conk, who once sent me a box of bandsaw cut knee bumpers with beveled edges in various dimensions and thicknesses. I love putting Conk parts and pieces in canoes; every rebuilt or outfitted canoe for the last few years has some Conk in it.
P9260011 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I had two larger slices left, 9” x 6”, a perfect 3/8” thick, edges already beveled. Just need to cut 1 ½” off so they match the size of the existing knee bumpers.
P9260010 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The usual, first some dry test-fit practice to see how I am going to hold and position the minicel for insta-stuck action, then three timed coats of contact cement on both minicel surfaces, a little heat gun action and pray my aim is true.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ao9WLBNcP6MWhile I was in minicel mode I checked the tenacity of the kneeling pads in the stern. What is the opposite of tenacity? I’ll go with “Get a grip dammmit”.
P9260012 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
There was a reason for that edge lift; those minicel pads were installed using double sided foam tape, randomly spaced tape, none near the perimeter of the pad. The pads were lifted along every edge.
P9260013 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I have two questions. Which previous owner did the original outfitting on the Sundowner, Rootsie or Willie, and what were they thinking?
Another command decision. Those pads are still in excellent condition and Joel is an occasional kneeler. I didn’t want to tear the pads completely off, some areas are still decently tape stuck and I’d risk tearing the minicel, but I can get some contact cement under the lifted edges, and maybe later run a bead of E-6000 around the perimeter. The E-6000 sounds like a Joel-job.
Knee bumper extensions underway.
P9260018 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
My aim was true. Clamped in place.
P9270020 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Stern kneeling pads contact cemented.
P9260016 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Can’t clamp those in place but some weights will hold them down until the contact cement cures.
P9270021 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Meanwhile I can prep some materials for Joel’s next shop day. I was out of conduit box adapters and we’ll need a couple for the Voyager. I made a mistake on the last batch, leaving the bar code labels on the necks before spray painting the flanges black. Those labels are difficult to remove; 91% isopropyl helped, but it also took off some paint.
P9270022 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I bought another batch. HomeDespot had nine in stock, I wanted ten; two for the Voyager bow (it has a rudder in the stern) and eight more, enough to do two canoes bow and stern.
This time I soaked the box adapters in vinegar and the labels came off residue free. A little buzzbuzz on the 1” belt sander removed the raised lettering on the flanges.
P9270025 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
A little buzzbuzz, a little pffftpffft of black spray paint and another stash of box adapters is ready to go.
P9270026 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Prep work done in time for Joel to stop by the next day for some foot brace pop rivet lamination prep work. He was in the cross-town area and managed to pay a too -brief shop visit; “I only have 40 minutes”.
I told him “I want four Sharpie dots where the foot brace rail pop rivets go”, handing him rulers and markers. Well, eight Sharpie dots, I’ll explain the extra four later.
Getting the Sharpie dot locations to Joel’s satisfaction took a lot of “No, that can’t be right” and “Dammit how is that still off” vocalizations, including an “OH NO, OH GOD!” before I had to intercede.
P9280028 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Joel dotted the hull inside and out for hole locations. With the faintest of hard to discern fly speck Sharpie dots. “Joel, the interior dot will be covered by the rail, and the out outside the hull by the flange rivet head. It doesn’t need to be that exactingly precise; no one will ever notice 1/16th of an inch off one way or the other”.
That “You measure and mark” technique means the boat owner/hole marker can’t say “Oh that looks off” when it is done.
Sharpie dots marked in time for Joel to tape out 2 ½” square tape box for lamination and cut squares of material; 1” squares of E-glass tape, 1 ½” squares of bia-axial woven Twaron tape, 2” squares of Kevlar tape. Well, the 1 ½” squares of Twaron tape ended up 1 ½” x 2”. Good enough, no worries.
P9290034 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
As he was taping Joel mentioned that he was running late because he had been to the symphony last night to hear Dvorak. I disappeared to the shop office, cued up symphony #9 on the computer speakers and blasted it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_1N6_O254gAfter a few minutes of that highbrow stuff I played something else, at even higher volume.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5oTrvdNoP4It seemed to spur his tape job along faster than Dvorak.
P9290029 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I wish Joel could have stayed for the fabric lamination; with the area tape boxed, the materials pre-cut and the epoxy already on the bench that took a whopping 10 minutes.
1” E-glass tape first
P9290030 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Then 1 ½” bias weave Twaron tape.
P9290031 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Then 2” Kevlar tape.
P9290032 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Release treated peel ply and repeat hard roller action.
P9290033 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The next morning the Sundowner was flipped over and the other side was done, no need for Joel to drive 45 minutes each way for 10 minutes work.