Egret Turnover
by Dale Austin
Thirteen months into construction, and the hull
is at last upright. The rollover was, um, interesting. I'm pleased
to say that not only is the boat upright and intact, but all
my limbs remain attatched and whole as well.
There was one other person involved, but that
was merely for convenience in matters such as moving piles of
2X4 blocking from one end of the boat to the other. Could have
done it completely solo if I'd had to. Not a good idea though,
if for no other reason that somebody should be around with 911
on their speed-dial.
I think it was George Buehler who said that whatever
number you have will prove to be exactly how many people you
need. I also recall a tale of somebody in England who called
up the drill instructor at the local army base and suggested
boat tipping might be good physical training. Something like
50 guys show up, pick up the boat and move it completely unaided.
(click images to enlarge)
1) Temporary struts attach hull to cradle. Pipe sections
under cradle act as rollers |
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2) Winch the hull from the garage using the truck as a
belay point. |
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3) Move the truck to the street to get another purchase. |
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4) Winching the boat sideways. Two winches are secured
to eye bolts in the cradle. |
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5) A sheet of MDF under the cradle is lubricated with
dishwashing liquid. |
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6) Rollover frame built around hull. |
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7) Rollover frame and towing straps. |
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8) Winch belayed to fence post. |
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9) Taking up the strain. |
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10) Blocking the frame as the side rises. |
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11) Jacking against the sheer clamp. |
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12) And over . . . |
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This is where things began to deviate from the
original plan. As you can see, part of the rollover frame failed
at a joint that I never expected to have to take the weight
of the boat. No damage was done to the bottom, and only minor
scraping to the sides-which haven't been finished anyway. I
had anticipated something like this, though would rather not
have had to deal with the crashing sound-and the neighbors poking
their heads out to see if the crazy man living next door was
still alive. Part of the plan kept people out of the landing
zone, just in case things got away from us.
13) In halfway position . . . |
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14) . . . change purchase to the boat |
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15) And flop onto its bottom. |
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16) Nearly flush to the ground. . . |
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17) . . . we start to jack it up . . . |
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18) high enough to clear the cradle. |
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19) Slowly coming up. First the front . . |
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20) . . . then the back. |
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21) Back onto the cradle. |
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22) Secure to the cradle, and slide sideways to line up
with the door. |
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23) Winch back into the garage. |
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24) Return to its original location, and align to datum |
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