E ceva în neregulă aici – Construirea unei bărci de 50 de picioare – Ep. 338 RAN Sailing

E ceva în neregulă aici - Construirea unei bărci de 50 de picioare - Ep.  338 RAN Sailing



Alăturați-vă echipajului RAN Sailing ~ pentru streamuri live, conținut exclusiv și multe altele https://www.patreon.com/ransailing Johan lucrează la suporturi de montare pentru a stabiliza cadrele temporare a carenei și apoi extindem parcul de mașini din hambar. Acum putem începe să rupem cedru roșu de vest! Suntem o familie suedeză care a navigat prin lume din 2016 în timp ce împărtășim aventurile aici pe YouTube. În timp ce încă navigăm, obiectivul nostru principal acum este construirea RAN III, o barcă cu pânze de 50 de picioare pe care o construim de la zero. Postăm un episod nou în fiecare vineri, așa că asigurați-vă că vă abonați și apăsați clopoțelul pentru a fi primul care află când există un nou episod! CONECTAȚI-VĂ CU NOI – Website: http://ransailing.se – Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/ransailing – Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ransailing PRODUSE & CAMERA ECHIPAMENT: https:// www.amazon.com/shop/ransailing Am adunat unele dintre produsele pe care le folosim în viața noastră de croazieră și realizarea de videoclipuri în magazinul nostru Amazon. Dacă cumpărați oricare dintre articolele din magazinul nostru, primim un mic „ka-ching” în pisicuța noastră de croazieră (fără costuri suplimentare pentru dvs.). Mulțumesc mult și mulțumesc programului Amazon Influencer. Credite muzicale: http://www.epidemicsound.com Love, Malin, Johan & Vera

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42 thoughts on “E ceva în neregulă aici – Construirea unei bărci de 50 de picioare – Ep. 338 RAN Sailing

  1. Hiddy-Ho, bro… Yeah, it is an impressive job you have done with the mold, to then prepare the start of laying the wood for the hull. In fact, I would recommend that you do NOT take down the mold, keep her where she is, and once you have the hull completed, and when you are ready to flip her, and start the internal build, find a climate controlled warehouse close by, haul the hull over there to be finished, because I believe that after all you've done to make the mold so stable and steadfast, you can utilize it over, and over again for some more hulls to be built… Believe me when I say, this is the first step to RAN SAILING YACHTS LLC. Do not take this lightly, because with the right crew, you can build around 4-5 Ran Sailing Yachts a year, and they will be desired by many of your patrons, or worldwide potential buyers! Contact me at http://www.asiafineyachts.com CaptBuzz

  2. I may be stating the obvious but in the interest of helping, you should be using a common datum line for locating each hull piece to avoid cumulative dimension errors. My two cents worth. Blessings 🙏🙏

  3. Looking good and coming together. One thought, Vera. Small children and heavy wood working machinery are a problem. Can I assume you have something in place to exclude inquisitive girls?

  4. Johan, have you thought about putting that planer just out side the doors to your building and building a tent over it, they create a ton of sawdust even with the vacuum extraction.. you will be constantly cleaning up your work area from sawdust, it will get everywhere.

  5. Thanks for the explanation. Am I correct in my understanding that when both the draft and the beam are getting smaller (and the planks will be touching the front face of the plywood) that in this case your reference planes represent the front face of the plywood? i.e. these plywood frames are 18mm aft compared to the previous frames in which the aft face of the plywood was the reference plane?

  6. people just need to understand the better the start the better the finish , can't wait to see the start of the planking !!!

  7. After you finish your own boat, you can reuse the same mold for another hull and so on, build your own sailboat factory !! 😉 Congratulations for your nice and professional work

  8. A heating pad under the epoxy and small fan to draw dust and fumes away when mixing will make epoxy prep nicer. My shop runs 10-20C, having the epoxy around 20C really helps in mixing. Very jealous of your new saw.

  9. Wow that is a lot of impressive woodworking machinery. Heavy duty stuff no doubt. Looking forward to see them at work . At 7:20, is that a crack in your beautifull window?

  10. With 3D printing would it be possible to build a much scaled down model to see how your sailboat goes in a local pond? You could have some fun with children playing with the "toy" boat! Cheers.

  11. I had understood it like this,
    If you didn't beveled a frame it would be like added extra hull shape lines in the drawing on 3:49
    With no beveling the hull won't be fair, i.e. the hull plating would be warped.

  12. Good morning from New Zealand. Good decision on buying your thicknesser/planer as going off site to do this is very difficult. We bought one of these for our "blokes Shed" here in the village where I live and it makes life so much easier. You will find it particularly good when you start all the fitting out inside. Keep up the good work. Skoll Ian.

  13. Being from a family of woodworkers this has been very interesting. How many neighbors have came by to see these crazy people building a huge boat in their barn in the middle of a crop field? lol Also how much power have you got coming into the barn? Enough to run more than one machine at a time? Take care.

  14. Those spiral cutters brought back memories! My dad had those on his molder (4 routers in 1 to do profile moldings) and I spent my teenage years using them.

  15. Guys, every week is soo interesting. You are doing a great job. Pace yourselves cuz I think it’s gonna get a lot harder before it gets easier. I can see this is your passion but just remember to balance your life with some fun and rest. Love and best wishes to the three of you. ❤

  16. Please get a good respirator. and a central vacuum for the dust. Looks like you're on your way to making a great build. So much was completed in just a short time.

  17. Hei,spennende prosjekt!Bare en kommentar i forbindelse med at du bruker West System epoxy. Selv har jeg drevet på med å restaurere en plywood 30- fots seilbåt. Jeg har gått over til å bruke det svenske merket:NB epoxy.Det er mange grunner;det er mye enklere å måle opp ved å veie,100g til 55g enhet på ei vekt, enn ved å bruke pumpe. Pumpen "hoster" og etter bruk tetter den seg.Det er også et problem med West System at,blander du for mye lim på en gang,begynner limet "å koke".Og det resulterer i at du får luftbobler. Hvem orker å blande små porsjoner, eller har tid til det ,når en skal legge glassfiber på et helt skrog!Forøvrig,Yrvind er vist sponset av NB-EPOXY.Det skulle garantere kvalitet!

  18. Johan, For several reasons,I hope you will reconsider your decision to rip and plane the Western Red Cedar cants yourself. Firstly, cedar sawdust is a serious health hazard. It will lodge in the lungs and causes 'cedar disease'. I still have a cough from working in a cedar mill over 30 years ago and we wore respirators. Secondly, ripping heavy timbers and planing them is tons and many days of tedious back-breaking work ( and you won't be able to keep the sawdust out of the air ). I suggest that you farm out this job to a commercial operation with a good band ripsaw. Thirdly, a bandsaw kerf is 1/2 or less than that of a circular sawblade so you don't waste as much in sawdust, and it makes a much smoother cut. Maybe you wouldn't have to plane the boards either. A little roughness might make a good bite for the resin of the fiberglass. Mostly I'm concerned about you and your family avoiding the sawdust as much as possible. I love your channel and Western Red Cedar is amazing.

  19. The blade that is in the rip saw is all wrong…. too many teeth. That looks more like a crosscut blade. I hope you new blade has fewer teeth and bigger gullets. It will rip A LOT faster.
    Good luck. That is a lot of lumber milling to do.

  20. Your videos seem to have become my Sunday morning coffee routine and I find myself really looking forward to them each week. You have managed to introduce such an elegant and gentle nature to your videos that they really are very relaxing and pleasant to watch and enjoy – more so than so many others available on the web. Well done and thankyou for sharing your build.
    As an afterthought (if you haven’t already done it anyway) I wonder if you might want to run a 100mm (or so) strip of cheap 9 to 12mm ply (or something) all around the outside base of your support legs so that you don’t constantly find yourself accidentally kicking the legs sideways as you are working around the boat…???

  21. Hey you guy's, Im really enjoying these vids. I have a question for you, is it feasible to reuse the boat mould you have built? And if so I 'm sure out of the 150K people that watch your channel some one would want to purchase it for their own build. It would have to be worth something surely. Cheers
    David

  22. Looking good and well done on the machines especially the Felder/Hammer. Are you going to get a spindle moulder to concave/convex the edges of the strip boards, Felder also do a fantastic machine. May I also suggest getting Felder or Co-Matic power feeds for all your machines “bench saw, jointer, spindle moulder” as it will dramatically improve performance and safety. You will be running thousands of meters of wood through the machines so £1,500 for 3 Co-Matics will be your best investment ever, trust me your back will thank you and hopefully your fingers will survive the experience. 👍

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