As with many projects, the design and planning stages take longer than the actual execution. Making a new sail cover for Eolian's mizzen was one of those projects. I started thinking about this last summer, while hanging on the mizzen boom by one arm, way out past the stern rail, making up the fasteners on the far end of the sail cover. I have been doing this acrobatic act for 20 years, but lately my shoulders have started to bother me, telling me that this process was going to have to change.
Well finally last week everything came together and I was able to spend the time to put the plans and design to the test: actual sewing.
You really want to use a hot knife for this... |
I unrolled the Sunbrella on the dock, laid out the pieces using a chalk line, and cut them out using my brand new, handy-dandy hot knife (you really want to use a hot knife for this work because it seals the edges of the cut, preventing unraveling). The only tricky part of the layout was the placement of the cut outs on the side pieces for the lazy jacks. To get these right, I tied the lazy jack lines to the boom at their design locations, and then stretched a tape measure along the diagonal that the top of the sail cover will make, taking the measurements where the diagonal intersected the jack lines.
Then the depth of the cut outs needed to be established. I wanted them to be just deep enough so that the top of the cut out, which will be the bottom once the stitching to make the batten pocket is completed, would be just above that seam in the finished product. Here's the detail on that: I had determined that a 4.5" circumference would make a batten pocket large enough to accommodate the 3/4" schedule 40 PVC pipe that I was going to use as battens. Adding a 1/2" seam allowance, I struck a "fold-to" line 5" away from the top edge of the side piece. Then I laid out the cut outs so that their ends were 1/2" (seam allowance) + 3/8" (allowing for the edging to be applied to the cut outs) = 7/8" from the fold-to line.
The rest was just sewing. The cover is just shy of 12 feet long, and there is no place inside Eolian to stretch it all the way out. But sewing it over the saloon table worked out OK.
I mentioned that I used 3/4" sched 40 PVC pipe for the battens (the gray kind, rated for outdoor use). PVC pipe comes in 10 foot lengths; the sail cover is just shy of 12 feet long... a splice was necessary. I didn't want to use a coupling, since that would make a lump that would make feeding the battens into the pockets difficult. It turns out that 1/2" sched 40 pipe has an OD just slightly larger than the ID of 3/4" pipe. So I bought a short length of 1/2" pipe, cut two 12" lengths, a slit one side of each piece lengthwise on my little table saw. That 1/8" kerf provided just the right amount of clearance to allow the 1/2" pipe to telescope into the 3/4". Assembling with pipe dope gave me a smooth splice.
Almost done... |
The top zipper would be impossible to operate if its aft end were not stabilized - a short strap there is seized to the topping lift line. The finishing touch is a tiny block seized to the topping lift line just above the zipper seizing - and a 1/8" line loop routed thru the block and tied to the zipper pull allows the zipper to be operated while standing on the deck, not hanging over the rail. Doing this work was interesting... I had to swing the boom out over the dock and stand on top of a ladder to reach the aft end of the boom.
I wasn't sure what I was going to do with closing off the aft end - I think I'll do nothing - the opening is not large enough to bother with.
I still need to make a front panel that wraps around the mast - the zippers that will attach it to the sail cover are already installed on the sail cover.
And I haven't yet cut the lazy jack lines to length - I think I am going to fiddle with them a little more - I want to see how things settle in with some use.
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3 comments:
Looks great, Bob. Glad to see it come together.
Wow! Amazing job. Can't wait to see it in action.
Sarah sends her love.
More and more of our projects seem to be oriented by accommodating our aging bodies. The first thing I thought, when reading the description of your old system, was how that would be hard on my shoulders! A few words later you said exactly that.
Beautiful job on the sail cover, Bob. That will keep you from hanging off the mizzen boom!
My latest accommodation to old age is working out a way to raise my "new" 33# Delta anchor (and chain) without straining my back, and without installing a windlass - I can't really spare the real estate on my foredeck, as that's where I carry my dinghy.
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