Catamaranul meu salvat primește plăci cu lanțuri recuperate | Sălbatic Sailing

Catamaranul meu salvat primește plăci cu lanțuri recuperate |  Sălbatic Sailing



Sudarea unor plăci de suport din plăci de lanț robuste folosind oțel inoxidabil 316 reciclat pentru proiectul meu Wharram Pahi 42 Catamaran. Instagramul meu: @boat.fella Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wildlingssai… Întrebări de afaceri: thewildlingsofficial@gmail.com Mulțumesc foarte mult oamenilor incredibil de generoși care folosesc linkurile de mai jos PayPal: https:/ /www.paypal.me/wildlingssailing Ko-fi: https://www.ko-fi.com/wildlingssailing Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/wildlingsailing Lista de dorințe Amazon: https://www.amazon.nl /hz/wishlist/ls/155FC0QR78BGF?ref_=wl_share Muzica pe care o ascult de fapt: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/22sIFakj1oGqZlpmXv3kgC?si=557a07debd3b4f64

source

47 thoughts on “Catamaranul meu salvat primește plăci cu lanțuri recuperate | Sălbatic Sailing

  1. Your dad is a great guy! I worked in metal fabrication for about 40 years, I’m sure I could have made the chainplates easier, but not necessarily better. That said, the rest of your dad’s mechanical skills far exceed mine! You’re a lucky man!

  2. Great you learned welding, (better than i could do ) but SS backing plates are for force directly against the plate to spread the load from the bolts. Seeing as you’re going to have lateral load on the plates their impact will be minimal, 3 or 6mm thick doesn’t matter, and remain on the bolts against the ply inserts you’ve glued in. Best bet would have been to build up the cabin wall, bulkhead join and epoxy in reinforcing. The lateral load would have been far better spread due to the adhesion of the resin. Quite a bit cheaper to do it with epoxy as well if you count the purchase of the welder. Watch Duracell Project or MJ Sailing to see how they did their chain plate areas. They de-cored the hull side and laying layer upon layer of glass to build it up into a strong point. On my Fusion 40 (extended)cat I cored and glassed the bulkhead point to the boat side with about 15 layers of 600gm bi-ax/Uni each side. The inner and outer stays then connected to two SS straps that bolted together through the bulk head. Point is the strength is in the bulkhead not the stainless. They are the main load area on your boat and catastrophic failure point. If the mast comes down at sea you’re a little bit screwed! Sorry to be a negative Nancy but maybe time for a bit more reinforcing and to re-assess the SS backing plate load areas. Ask ANY boatbuilder, don’t take just my word for it! Sorry but you always ask for feedback. Long time fan!

  3. Your welding has come along … nice beads along the edges. Did you mark out the locations of the holes on the template? It would probably be much easier to get all of the holes drilled with a drill press, rather than trying to go through 6mm of stainless with nothing but a hand drill back at the boat! Keep up the good work!

  4. Great to catch up with you again Mark and fantastic to see you fabricate the backing plates and learning new skills – life is a learning curve and one day you’ll be the one passing on the learnt and practised skills we’ve seen you gain and not just from this episode but from the whole project. Amazing to watch from a long term subscriber and liker of your channel and content

  5. I get that this was a welding learning exercise, but if this was me I would have taken the plate to a mate with a bending machine & just bending two 3 mm plates !

  6. I would do some research into stainless steel, and how to keep it from corroding. I seem to recall someone, who seemed to know, saying stainless would rust if you scratched it, so my intuition would make me polish it. And paint it. And keep it away from the ocean, alltogether! 🙂

  7. Hi Mark, I have watched all your videos, and would love to see more. I have also been catching up on the 5 years of content from Leo at Sampson Boat Co who has been restoring a 100+ year old gentlemans cruising yacht. H ehas 473K followers, god knows how many patreons and is now employing 4 full time boat builders to build his yacht in a covered hangar. His approach to everything is meticulous (maybe overly so), but also very eductaional. Maybe you can get some hints and tips from his channel and get your boat finished quicker. Maybe more videos (some general cat stuff?) means more income = more cash to buy tools, materials, services. Then you can speed up the project and get on the water sooner. Dying to see this boat go through sea trials!! Best wishes – Jon

  8. keep it up dude. so glad i found your channel around the start of this project, been a joy to watch. also just an idea fron someone who knows nothing about boats, but those chainplates look like they could use a couple of horizontal strengthening brace peices across the 90°? would strengthen them and would stop them bending so much when welding the main seem weld…. lack of technical vocabularly on my part but hope it makes sense

  9. Hey Mark, great work on getting those chainplates sorted out for Wildling! Your welding skills have definitely come a long way and it's awesome to see you improving with each project. Those backing plates might be overkill to some, but you know what they say, better safe than sorry. Keep up the fantastic work and keep thanking your dad for his support. You're truly lucky to have him. Wishing you smooth sailing ahead, my friend.

  10. Well done Mark. Your skills are certainly getting you used to some new techniques which will stand you in good stead later on. Some great work carried out at home. Well done.

  11. Awesome work Mark and your dad of course, he is a legend. If the backing plates are overkill then you won’t be worrying about them whereas if you just went with the 3mm you might have had a nagging worry in your head and I’m sure there will be plenty of other things to worry about. As for your welding, it looks great to me, I’m no expert but yours is a million times neater than mine. Look forward to the next video. Andy UK

  12. Please ask your father to correct the orientation in which he is hanging the US flag. I appreciate his liking American muscle cars, but seeing the flag hanging incorrectly is bothersome

  13. Mark, you're getting to be a dab hand now at all this engineering milarky !! 😊. You actually look good holding these tools now. Its great to see. Still a massive task ahead of you but You got a great team behind you and were all willing you to get it done and have faith in you. Well done you. 👏 👍

  14. Hi Mark,
    Great work keep it up.
    A little note.
    With stainless steel any steel touches or scratches the stainless it will rust where steel touches.
    All grinding discs should be iron free as well or will rust the stainless.
    When was work in a stainless workshop no mild steel aloud in the stainless shop.

Comments are closed.

Follow by Email
YouTube
YouTube
WhatsApp