The rudder we built swings! Machining bronze castings for our wooden sailing boat. (EP52)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
  • The pieces of the puzzle are coming together with our rudder for Tarkine. We have our bronze castings sent away to be machined and prepared for fitting.
    Matt begins by dry fitting the rudder in place, this becomes a slightly difficult job due to the awkward size and shape of the rudder.
    Once dry fitted he marks out where all the gudgeon and pintles go and the correct depths.
    In-between all of this Ed the Engineer is busy in his little workshop making everything flat and inline, also preparing the rudder stock with a keyway and rather beautiful nut.
    We hope you enjoy this latest video after so much hard work on the cabin and cabin top its great to find some direction below the waterline!
    As always a big thanks to you all, don't forget to like, subscribe and leave a comment if you fancy!
    For more updates and content have a look at our Patreon page, Its free to sign up!
    / aboatbytheriver
    Check out our Paypal fundraiser for a one off donation.
    www.paypal.com/pools/c/943irF...
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Комментарии • 152

  • @Gnipsel
    @Gnipsel 16 дней назад

    I've moved a lot of heavy equipment and lifted heavy things using my brain as the major power source. I have several milk crates from the last few decades and they sure come in handy. Just keep your wits about you and you will be fine. Can't wait to see the boat in the water. I used to single hand a 21' swing keel in the Gulf of Mexico for a number of years and still remember the fun, excitement and terror of sailing. Mostly fun and excitement...

  • @tomblodgett7389
    @tomblodgett7389 11 дней назад +1

    Excellent craftsmanship. Your attention to detail on everything you do is on point. You two are building an amazing boat!! Cheers from Austin, TX

  • @pascalleguennec9112
    @pascalleguennec9112 12 дней назад

    Bravo ! 🎉Un amoureux ❤du travail du bois et des voiliers ⛵️ ... 😊

  • @marleenenmarcelhoremans6636
    @marleenenmarcelhoremans6636 27 дней назад +1

    Klijken en meten , veel tijd verstreken . Maar telkens weer maak je er iets fantastisch van . Prachtig werk , je mag trots zijn op je zelf . Groetjes Marcel .❤

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад

      Dank je wel Marcel! Het is inderdaad altijd veel meten. Meten is weten zeg maar ;)
      Bedankt voor het kijken en de positieve feedback! Word enorm gewaardeerd

  • @psystealth
    @psystealth 22 дня назад +1

    beautiful Matt !! nice Hat 😀

  • @janhellinck6830
    @janhellinck6830 27 дней назад +1

    i like the swing

  • @ghoogers
    @ghoogers 27 дней назад +1

    Great work!

  • @ricksimpson1543
    @ricksimpson1543 24 дня назад +1

    Very nice work! I was really wishing you had some help with the lifting but your typical ingenuity worked just fine!

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  24 дня назад

      Hahaha yeah! Iefke away at work and Obie was fast alseep.. nothing a milk crate couldn’t handle!

  • @edkleinstuber2119
    @edkleinstuber2119 27 дней назад +3

    Sat on my deck beside my sailboat with some fresh picked tomatoes and enjoyed every minute of this vid. Thanks for taking the time to put it together for us. Making tough decisions without your wife is a gutsy move, nicely done. ed

  • @Antipodean33
    @Antipodean33 27 дней назад

    Top effort mate, this boat has really come along nicely. That rudder looks like it's made from Jarrah, if so i can imagine the weight, not to mention it's hardness. I was lucky to get a job demolishing a structure inside of an old workshop used for maintaining trains. It had huge Jarrah beams 8 to 10 inches wide and varying lengths of around 10 to 12 feet and 2 inches thick. I was told it was over 100 years old and the owner wanted the timber not only removed but scrapped. Suffice to say there was no chance of dumping it so I kept it all. I've made hundreds of bucks selling some of it here and there. I couldn't believe the owner wanted it scrapped, what a criminal waste I thought

  • @jonappleton1704
    @jonappleton1704 28 дней назад +5

    Not the easiest thing to do single handed! Looking great as always!

  • @ElleKendra
    @ElleKendra 28 дней назад +5

    Never fun making cuts and fittings when there are no second chances. Nice job.

  • @sailingsheriff3349
    @sailingsheriff3349 26 дней назад +1

    Love your work

  • @davehine724
    @davehine724 25 дней назад +3

    Your music choices for these vids are fantastic!!!

  • @stevedunford7632
    @stevedunford7632 28 дней назад +4

    Orca will get a headache trying to attack that. Very nice work as always.

  • @gregknipe8772
    @gregknipe8772 27 дней назад +2

    my imagination gets a refill every time I see your works on this sweet craft. thank you!!!

  • @DWAJarrett
    @DWAJarrett 28 дней назад +3

    That must be up there with the prettiest rudder ever❤ Lots of ways to solve gudgeons and pintles, I think you have a great solution to a really complicated problem.

  • @regdix2908
    @regdix2908 28 дней назад +3

    Congratulations, Live the dream. A job well done.

  • @iefkelena
    @iefkelena 28 дней назад +4

    Rudder workout....
    You did a great job!
    Thanks for the nice video, I keep on dreaming how she will look in the water, on her journey with that lovely crew!

  • @normanboyes4983
    @normanboyes4983 27 дней назад +2

    Matt the rudder and the associated bronze fittings are a work of art - you have a good eye for detail and aesthetics. A couple of comments on detail if I may: (1) Difficult to judge on a video but when the key is in the shaft the shoulder that will be doing the driving (or standing proud of the shaft) looks a bit ‘short’ it looks as though it needs a ‘taller’ key which will require the bronze fitting to be re-broached. (2) Once the rudder is in service keys tend to ‘grow’ themselves in place, do yourself a favour take the key out and at one end on the top, drill and tap for an M8 bolt that can be used to jack the key out of the keyway. On installation pack the threaded hole with marine grease.
    Keep up the good work.😀⛵️👍

  • @n01k32
    @n01k32 28 дней назад +2

    great episode, beautiful brasswork and rudder, Tally Ho Tight!

  • @lifeexplained2u
    @lifeexplained2u 28 дней назад +2

    First video i saw of you your arm was in a sling. Dont end back up there!
    Looking good. Keep up the good work.

  • @kentate435
    @kentate435 28 дней назад +2

    Wonderful progress

  • @StevieB_Slowbart
    @StevieB_Slowbart 28 дней назад +2

    Bravo! Such an interesting juggle between finessing and wrestling.

  • @rickestabrook4987
    @rickestabrook4987 28 дней назад +2

    Good work Matt!

  • @Vendelcrow1948
    @Vendelcrow1948 27 дней назад +1

    Hi gang!!!
    Looking good, the rudder!! As for the tiller, get one tiller extension, its really good steering hanging out side.
    I have a seven meter, open wooden double ender with a tiller ca 1,90 m, and an extension of two alu pipes, the outer one goes into the other, and can stop by turning the cork ball.....Its SO handy !! Consider it, and check out the tiller extensions for sale....
    Allda bestest from mikke in sweden....;-D

  • @bendaves77
    @bendaves77 21 день назад

    Matt, I'm 46 and as a young man and still although I know better have always been known to do things on my own. Lifting heavy things or whatever it is, it's usually the wife that calls a friend without me knowing asking for help before I hurt myself. I have blown my shoulder out and had 2 reconstructive surgeries on it and have had a disk replacement and fusion in my lower spine only to injure my back higher up and now needing another surgery. I say all this to say that you should be asking for a helping hand before you further injure yourself and end up in your 40s and waking up every morning sore and stiff. Resulting in it taking you several minutes to get up and walking around in a form or shape similar to how other people get up and move in the morning.. once you injure your back there's no coming back 100% ever again, same goes with living life without pain. Living a life that involves chronic pain sucks for the person who has it and the person or people who are living around that person.. would like to see you and others I've warned keep from making the same mistake... such beautiful hardware, no doubt you are going to have a stunning sailboat.. the cool thing is that everyone who comes aboard will see and know the amount of skilled craftsmanship that you 2 have poured into your boat..

  • @user-yl3cp3rp8l
    @user-yl3cp3rp8l 27 дней назад +1

    I think you're heading in the right direction with this beautiful rudder

  • @geoffbox4455
    @geoffbox4455 27 дней назад +1

    It is so relaxing watching your vids. Great to see a crafts person(s) at work. You are both doing such a good job. Thank you

  • @tommiller8416
    @tommiller8416 15 дней назад +1

    Just found your videos, great work! :)

  • @kimrevell9419
    @kimrevell9419 28 дней назад +2

    Yep my mind is blown, she is beautiful.

  • @sboileau2
    @sboileau2 28 дней назад +1

    This video drove me nuts! I kept putting down my coffee and saying 'Wait let me give you a hand' lol ..... Love the lines of the rudder and the fittings!

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      Hahaha yeah we even had that when we were editing it! It is hard to watch and not do something!

  • @MurfittTim
    @MurfittTim 28 дней назад +2

    That was hard work for you on your own but as ever you managed it. Getting the balance between strength and ease of maintenance is not easy but the better the design the less maintenance you will hopefully have to do later on. Looking good as always.

  • @wminnebo
    @wminnebo 26 дней назад +1

    Love the work Matt. Fingers crossed it still swings as nicely as it did after the bottom brackets have been fitted. It’ll be a challenge to line them all up. Suppose that’s where your “wiggle room” comes into play 😊

  • @user-qk8dr2ye5n
    @user-qk8dr2ye5n 28 дней назад +1

    Doing great work again! Good idea having the hole going all the way through on the heel. This will allow the water to flow through and prevent the accumulation of debris which would ultimately cause wear to the heel. Would it be worth considering machining a recessed hex or simple slot in the bottom end of the pin to aid removal/fitting of the rudder with it secured by grub screws?

  • @MikeAG333
    @MikeAG333 28 дней назад +4

    The woodwork.....yes, easily. The fibreglassing, yeah, I'd manage. The finishing? - I'd be rubbish. The machining, and other metalworking?........I wouldn't have a clue. Boatbuilding looks such fun, and such a broad collection of skills. Pity my wife has vetoed the idea.....
    So, you found an old Pom to do the machining. A Yorkie, I suspect.
    I like the new introduction, Matt, and if I can offer a suggestion I'd say stick with that every time.

    • @Loffyfromthehills
      @Loffyfromthehills 28 дней назад +1

      Love your work Matt, and most people do not appreciate how many skills go into building a boat, especially one like yours.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад

      Hahahaah yes we feel the same, metal work and finishing is an art that we cannot do or understand, that’s why we are so lucky with Ed! Thanks mate. Much appreciated

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  25 дней назад

      Thanks!!

  • @rolandtb3
    @rolandtb3 28 дней назад +1

    Expensive, intricate, heavy work. One step at a time.

  • @rolanddunk5054
    @rolanddunk5054 25 дней назад +1

    Hi,A brilliant job on the rudder Matt even more so when doing it by yourself.Great work 👏👏👍.cheers,Roly🇬🇧.PS.after taking another look at your video would it be possible to fit a straight pin through the middle and bottom brackets with a bolt through them to hold the pins in place,the brackets remain in place with just the rudder stock to take out..

  • @pauld9530
    @pauld9530 28 дней назад +1

    I love that rudder and the bling. It looks so cool how the bracket curls around the prop opening. So i have no idea what the correct boat words are.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      Ah there is no such thing as correct word in boats! Different all over the world. But you did well! Cheers

  • @ikerstges
    @ikerstges 28 дней назад +1

    bronze-bling-beauty, luvit!!

  • @MrPeerBonnemann
    @MrPeerBonnemann 28 дней назад +1

    I am quite obsessed with your work

  • @user-jp3xr8od2k
    @user-jp3xr8od2k 28 дней назад +1

    That's awesome guys !! Your machinist does nice work and you did a great job fitting that !! Cant wait to visit and see it for real

  • @PeterSpringhall
    @PeterSpringhall 27 дней назад +1

    Well that one felt stressful! 😮 Great effort and outcome!

  • @Kaymarie660
    @Kaymarie660 27 дней назад +1

    It looks like a work of fine art! ❤ fantastic job!

  • @rossmain4142
    @rossmain4142 27 дней назад +1

    Beautiful work

  • @semaphoredm
    @semaphoredm 28 дней назад +1

    Great work. Am loving the journey.

  • @hairy8184
    @hairy8184 28 дней назад +1

    I could almost smell the jarrah, hard to describe, but I used to call it sickly sweet. I miss it, don't see much of it where I live now and never imagined I'd see used it on a rudder but hey it's certainly a tough timber. Looking good.

  • @craftendra
    @craftendra 28 дней назад +1

    Look absolutely beautiful and strong. Wish I had bronze hinges too.
    Very well designed. I’m excited how you‘re gonna build the post 🤓

  • @xpdnc9794
    @xpdnc9794 28 дней назад +2

    I love a good gudgeon, not so keen on a pintle HaHa 🤪😜 but seriously great work especially hanging your rudder by yourself. Usually at least a two man job.

  • @frederickszalay1484
    @frederickszalay1484 24 дня назад +1

    Magnificent bronze hardware on a superb rudder! Are you folks planning to fiberglass the outside of the hull? And how many layers? It is one beautiful hull. What are your plans for the external ballast?

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  18 дней назад

      Yes! Maybe two layers on the outside, we already have one on the inside.. so it should be enough! External ballast is 5.5ton of lead which e have slowly been collecting over the years!

  • @davidrichardson5163
    @davidrichardson5163 28 дней назад +1

    Another stunning achievement, Matt. Surely you can rig up a hoist or something similar to lift the rudder so the strain isn't on your back? If you trip whilst supporting the weight of the rudder, you'll do yourself some serious long-term damage.

  • @SavingMaverick55
    @SavingMaverick55 27 дней назад +1

    That has gotta be the most complex and unique gudgeon and pintle setup I've seen on a sailboat. Your not worried about dissimilar metals attacking each other with your bronze gudgeons and stainless pintles? Someone bolted stainless plates over the bronze gudgeons on the sternpost of my boat and when I went to remove it all, the gudgeons fell apart.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      We are always worried about our metals but not much to be done, we will stick an annode on and hope for the best! Haha
      Your last video was good! Keep up the hard work!

    • @SavingMaverick55
      @SavingMaverick55 27 дней назад

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_River Thanks! Will do!

  • @paulgatenby6354
    @paulgatenby6354 26 дней назад +1

    Love your work. What would we do without milk crates. An old builder mate of mine calls them dairy farmers scaffolding . If you stack two and stand on it it's dangerous but if you cable tie them together it's then safety scaffolding.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  25 дней назад

      Oh glad you noticed! Milk crates are the best! People often build bed heights to a milk crate standard haha

  • @rick91443
    @rick91443 28 дней назад +1

    Great timing; morning coffee and wife's not up yet(to tell me I have better things to do, lol...) cheers richard of Normandy

  • @ed_cetera
    @ed_cetera 28 дней назад +1

    Amazing all that lines up so squarely and pivots so nicely,
    Im guessing that too precise may equate to tight, in future, what with the swelling of wood and changes the water immersion has to make.
    Your efforts are worth it, it's looking very nice indeed !

  • @willemhekman1788
    @willemhekman1788 28 дней назад +1

    Nice intro!

  • @davidbamford4721
    @davidbamford4721 28 дней назад +5

    CAREFUL !! If you heat bronze you won’t make it soft, you’ll make it brittle. VERY brittle! If you heat it and then hit it, you will have two pieces of bronze. Don’t ask me how I found out about this.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  28 дней назад

      Oh that’s some great advice, thankyou! I guess you learnt the hard way..?

    • @boooshes
      @boooshes 27 дней назад

      He was speaking of heating enough to soften the bedding compound, in this case Sikaflex, when he needs to remove the lowest pintle and gudgeon.

  • @joesprague1464
    @joesprague1464 27 дней назад +1

    Beautiful wood and bronze work here,almost a shame to cover it in bottom paint…

  • @markweiss6222
    @markweiss6222 26 дней назад +1

    Really hoping you don't get a sore back like I got

  • @dnomyarnostaw
    @dnomyarnostaw 28 дней назад +1

    Good progress. Am I right in understanding that the entire turning/steering mechanism is relying on that single keyway at the bottom of the shaft?

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  28 дней назад

      Thanks! Yeah it’s also a compression fit to a lip on the shaft and the big nut on the bottom plus a couple of grub screws! In our engineer we trust!

    • @dnomyarnostaw
      @dnomyarnostaw 28 дней назад +1

      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River It sounds quite adequate when all those components are working, but things like seawater, stray currents, dissimilar metal corrosion, and shear brute force have ways of foiling the best plans.
      For example, the metal key on the keyway is probably stainless steel, where bereft of oxygen, it could suffer crevice or galvanic corrosion.
      In my head, I see 40 kilos of bronze strapping designed to hold the rudder together, and then 200 grams of 5mm flat steel that the whole system relies on.
      And they call me Paranoid. Can you believe it? 😀
      Ps. One around the world yachtie put a metal fastening point at the top of his rudder, so if the steering mechanism failed, he could attach a rope or chains to the top of the rudder directly for emergency steering.

  • @mikem1436
    @mikem1436 28 дней назад +1

    There were a couple of videos earlier in making the rudder; too many videos to search thru. I believe the rudder was made with several pieces of wood glued (epoxied) together. It is fairly wide. What was done to reduce the chance of splitting and breaking along the grain. Were the wood piece drilled, and dowels inserted, or something to that effect?

  • @gregoryh4601
    @gregoryh4601 28 дней назад

    Sir Matt Just a thought would a Bronze half circle on the Boat side help and dress her up more?

  • @user-di4kv9yk3g
    @user-di4kv9yk3g 28 дней назад +1

    i do love to watch a grown man struggle with the little things - but joking aside, take it from me, its the little things that can ruin your day, i broke my back two years ago and it is still giving me bother today, and Matt remember your shoulder, when laying in bed at night is when the best plans come together, i would suggest, taking a large lump of timber, perhaps a stump or something, chainsaw a slot into it to make a foot for the rudder to sit it as close to desired angle, you could use a ratchet strap to secure and use what's laying around the workshop doing nothing, mmm like that weird contraption sat in the corner, yes Matt the forklift, its very useful for defying that mother of all f**k ups, they call it gravity, that's what broke my back, it wasn't the height or the fall, it was the landing, you can lean the rudder against the forklift for desired or correct angle and stand back and admire the genius who designed the forklift - but anyways, great job, nice to have some bling at the rear

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      Oh wow, yes you’re right. Only get one body to use and need to look after it!

    • @user-di4kv9yk3g
      @user-di4kv9yk3g 25 дней назад

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_River haha - you'll learn after the first time AND FORGET - we're all indestructible until that one accident that changes things - after doing my back in (now two years ago) still gives me agro, and everything i do, even getting out the car, i have to think through, it really slows you down, so yeah, one body, one chance, don't muck it up Matt, you got a great wife there, and i know you'd hate to be a burden - stay safe

  • @user-ob1xw9kf5l
    @user-ob1xw9kf5l 27 дней назад +1

    I deeply love your hat. Where can I find the same ?

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад

      Hahahaah oh that’s a mother in law special… rare as hens teeth haha

    • @user-ob1xw9kf5l
      @user-ob1xw9kf5l 27 дней назад

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_River keep it well and don’t be stolen ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @bendaves77
    @bendaves77 21 день назад +1

    I know you're a ways off still but what's your plans for rigging and what type rigging are you going to be using?? Dyneema or stainless steel cable or???? Just curious I'm no sailor but have found a recent interest in sailing, have recently watched a video were a young man is rigging his Wharram catamaran 46'er using dyneema and he's doing it himself. It's pretty amazing technology. Seen many professional riggers talk about how great it holds up. One said after 6k nautical miles the dyneema looked brand new without any signs of wear or weakness..

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  18 дней назад

      Yeah we just watched his video! It’s is quite interesting. We are still not sure which way we are going to go.. need to find a rigger that can give us some advice!

    • @bendaves77
      @bendaves77 18 дней назад

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_River it's pretty interesting with the use of dyneema and the ability to carry everything you need for all rigging repairs..

  • @MrPetrvershinin
    @MrPetrvershinin 27 дней назад +1

  • @karengunn4558
    @karengunn4558 26 дней назад +1

    Assume your shoulder is better than ever now. Hope that's the case, as that's some heavy lifting you're doing there

  • @svpearlsailacapegeorgesail4758
    @svpearlsailacapegeorgesail4758 27 дней назад

    There's a lot riding on that keyway, I've removed rudders and there's always wear. What's going to happen if that keyway breaks? The forces are extreme with a following sea, I'm not criticizing, just speaking from experience.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  26 дней назад

      Ah in our engineer we trust! It also has two grub screws and the big nut compresses the casting against the shaft so it should be ok! Propellor are done the same

  • @mgmcd1
    @mgmcd1 28 дней назад +2

    You need some tackle to deal with that rudder perhaps, rather than wrestle it around by yourself. 😊

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      Yeah I think that’s the next thing, especially as it keeps getting heavier with all the bronze

    • @mgmcd1
      @mgmcd1 27 дней назад

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_River at least you won’t have to worry about dropping it.

  • @adrianhope4796
    @adrianhope4796 28 дней назад +1

    Are you saying all the stress /weight of steering your rudder is through that key and key way?

  • @TheMikesylv
    @TheMikesylv 27 дней назад +1

    Where the hell is your wife/girlfriend to help you with the rudder

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  26 дней назад

      Hahaha she’s off working to pay for the bronze work!

    • @TheMikesylv
      @TheMikesylv 26 дней назад +1

      @@Building_a_Boat_by_the_Riveryea figured I was joking anyway I sure you gathered that. Peace brother

  • @ghoogers
    @ghoogers 24 дня назад +1

    Just checked your Patreon account. On 6/24/2024 I sent you AU$100 and the Patreon account does not show it. There is a note that the Patreon account expired on 05/29/2024. I have no idea where the money went. Gus

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  24 дня назад

      Hey Gus, firstly thankyou so much for your amazing donation! I think you mean PayPal, and what happens there is the fundraiser has ended, they only last a month and we don’t know how to change that.. you were the only person to donate last month, so what happens when the fundraiser ends is we receive any donations and us it for Tarkine.
      I hope that helps? And once again thankyou for your donation and concern at it disappearing! Cheers

  • @flightplan1000
    @flightplan1000 28 дней назад

    Nice boat work but the repetitive music sucks.

    • @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River
      @Building_a_Boat_by_the_River  27 дней назад +1

      Ah it's a shame you didn't like it. I try and make the videos pleasant to watch including the music as a soft background. It seems I failed at that for you this time. Hopefully the next will be more to your taste again. Cheers