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The truth about the ice box.
I have got to tell you, having spent the better part of the day becoming intimately acquainted with the ice box on Faith, I have come away impressed.
Say what you will about those (often) drunken Portuguese fishermen that I understand were the majority of the workcrew at Pearson when our boats were being assembled, I am impressed (I think that is who I should put it).
I have a buddy who does cabinet work. If he assembled cabinets like these guys built this ice box, it would take approximately 8 years to remodel a single kitchen.
TO back up,
I have a confession. I like my ice box (now past tense). I like my cabinets, the hanging locker, I even like the original Monel water tank up forward. I drank water out of it all summer and there ain't a thing wrong with me......
Well, anyway.
The problem is that I have never used my Ice box as an ice box. I use it as dry storage. I know that I would not use it while cruising, and frankly don't have a great need for lot's of cold storage anyway. (medium cooler suits me fine).
The ice box is very inefficient for dry storage (with all the space taken up by insulation), and I wanted to remove the lid from my favorite lounging spot in the cockpit anyway (as well as remove the potential off-shore liability).
Today was too damp to epoxy the holes left by the removal of the jib tracks. So the ice box was bumped to the top of the list.
Here is what my old friend looked like before I started.
I know, shameful. It was always good for collecting all the junk that piled up as I was working on everything else. The purple magazine rack..... that I will not miss. :D
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The insulation around the frame
Here is the insulation behind the front. Now, if this were it I would not think too much of it. The design goes on.....
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An idea of where I am going...
Here it is with the original base in place. I will not be using it, except as a pattern but it gives a good idea of the size of table.
Just right for the manual! :D
I am leaving the side of the old ice box (inboard) to partition the space. It should keep the pots and pans from sliding ALL the way across the counter..... At least I hope. :D
The purple magazine rack.
Quote:
Did you have to take 1, 2, or more deep breaths before you started the destruction?
I am maybe a little but overly reverent about such things. I was actually a little uneasy about destroying this thing. I feel like it has endured for 40 years, and once gone it can not be put back. I want to make it better, and hope that this feeling translates into doing the work well.
Time will tell.
As for the purple magazine rack, sadly it was destroyed in the effort. :p
Gnawed it out like a dog.
I basically gnawed it out like a dog.
I was prying, and pulling. The plywood tore as I pried it where I could not reach the screw heads (mainly the ones run from the inside that had been glassed over). I avoided the hammer, as much to keep from poking my eye out as anything :eek:
Yes, I am a student of celestial. I have a brass sextant, and a Davis 25 both. I have the theory down pat, and can successfully get a fix, at any time of day in any sea state that will firmly establish which hemisphere I am in. :D
I am going for the 'faired as though it had not been there' look. I like the concept, and the execution in the manual is excellent but I would rather not have to protect the lexan window. I want it to be very strong (thick fiberglass, well attached) and fair. I also like to lean up against the cabin at anchor and the refer door has not been a comfortable perch.
The inside will be cut clean, and trimmed. I plan to put a small shelf where the ice box top once was, as it is a handy place to reach down to when topside for small items like the hand bearing compass.
I have a small 10w 12v halogen fixture purchased from the poor mans 'WM'
that will mount nicely under the shelf and should be hidden from view by the overhang, as well as a pair of red led clusters for night time use.
Couple of thought & updates
As the project continues, a couple of thoughts that might be helpful;
First an observation;
After removing the ice box, I noticed the boot stripe on the starboard side showed more.
I doubt that was the weight of the ice box it’s self, but rather the canned goods I had stowed there, being so far outboard. I can clearly see 1.5"-2" of the boot stripe that was not visible before.
The list was not so pronounced that I had ever noticed it before I removed the icebox. I think it probably came and went as I stocked and depleted my pantry which happens regularly as I kinda a semi-live-aboard.
Notes on the conversion;
You can kind of see in the picture in post #7, the cabin liner appears to 'frown' with the outer edges being lower then center. The cockpit seats also are lower at their outer edges then they are at the inside.
The cockpit seat bottom is not parallel to the chart table, or the cabin sole, or (or what ever plane you would chose as a benchmark). I plan to mount a small shelf at approximately the same height as the old ice box top. I have decided to mount it in front of, rather then under, the liner to account for this.
Do not underestimate the depth of the hole you will have to fill once you remove this lip. :eek: I epoxy-glassed 3/8" to the bottom and then laid up many layers of roving. If I had it to do over, I would have filled the center with a 1/4 ply core and laid more roving over the top. I kind of feel like a worker at the Pearson factory in that I lost track of how many layers of roving I laid up in that hole. Let's just say it is plenty thick. :rolleyes:
Also;
*Cutting the lip out of the deck brought out the 'lip liner' as well. This additional flap of fiberglass was not attached to anything but the underside of the lip. I realize that this will make little or no sense with no picture, or if you are not in the middle of this job. It may, however be helpful to someone who is scratching their head as I was 3 days ago.
Got the fairing compound over it yesterday afternoon, hope to sand it and get the topcoat in the cockpit this weekend. Then again, I might knock the dust off and go sailing.
Decisions decisions........
* I wish I had a picture, but may help if you do the job.
Making peace with the original interior.
[size=3] I am now attempting to make peace with the general lines of the remainder of the original interior in #226.[/size]
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[size=3] I have grown tired of tripping over the large box of stuff I removed from the ice box when I tore it out as I have worked on other projects. The natural place to put them is in the bottom cabinet under the drawers on the port side, but alas that is already occupied. :( [/size]
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[size=3] I took a few pictures of the mess aboard 'Faith' but am too embarassed to post them, let's sufice to say I need more stowage room. :o One mod I did not seem to find in the archives was to convert the hanging locker into a cabinet. Now, I know that there is a danger in loading too much stuff into it, but with prudence I think it will be ok.[/size]
[size=3][/size]
[size=3] Here is what I am thinking. Remove the coat bar, not a real loss since it only holds a couple coats anyway. Then put 2 or 3 shelves on cleats, with barrel bolts on top to make sure they don't pop out in foul weather.[/size]
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[size=3] Maybe something like this;[/size]
[size=3][/size]
[size=3]Top Shelf 12”: (light stuff) Bread, chips, nuts, etc.[/size]
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[size=3]Middle shelf 14”: Autohelm, Sextant, Flare kit, First Aid kit[/size]
[size=3][/size]
[size=3]Bottom Shelf: Plastic storage box with pantry items formerly under drawers on port side.[/size]
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Bottom cabinet under drawer on port side: Canned goods formerly in ice box.
Thoughts?