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Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Cobra Tool Kit #1
I wanted to put together a tool kit for my Cobra (actually a Factory Five Roadster replica of a 1965 AC Cobra). Real kits are rare, expensive, and not very useful. I decided on a few tools I might need including a breaker bar, 13/16" socket (for both spark plugs and lug nuts), vice grips, slotted and phillips screw drivers, adjustable wrench, and box wrenches of 3/8", 7/16", 1/2", and 9/16". A separate project will be to have a case with an extra belt, tape, duct tape, a jack, and a flat repair can.
I had an old military surplus case laying around that I sacrificed to get the heavy canvas and binding from.
I am using my Brother Exedra E-40 Industrial machine to build this. The thread is V-92 green thread.
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Initial layout of the tools |
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First pocket for the breaker bar |
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Next set of pockets for an adjustable wrench, and the 9/16" and 1/2" box wrenches. |
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Tippecanoe T27 RC Sailboat Build #11
I purchased the wall hanger from Tippecanoe and was very happy with how this looks hanging on the wall. It is up for display for all to see as they come to my home :-)
It looks like I painted only half the keel and rudder red but that is just a shadow - the bottom, keel and rudder are red, and the hull is navy blue. The deck is varnished wood.
Note the masthead streamer - I made this myself out of 3/4 oz. spinnaker cloth (use it for a lot of projects on my big sailboats).
Friday, April 3, 2015
Tippecanoe T27 RC Sailboat Build #10
Final assembly - transom lettering
I wanted to enhance the mahogany transom by putting on a high-quality gold lettering. I found a place online called www.doityourselflettering.com that allows you to design your lettering, choose fonts and effects, size it, and you get your lettering in the mail a few days later. This ended up costing less than $10 (they sent me 3 of them in case I screwed it up!). I was originally going to try and hand paint them but this obviously looks a lot better.
For those who care where the name came from, watch the movie "Caddyshack" some time and you'll see :-)
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The lettering came with clear directions. This is exactly how I installed the lettering on my real boat :-) |
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"I christen thee 'The Flying Wasp'" |
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Very classy looking in dark blue with a red bottom. |
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Stern view |
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Bow view |
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Close up of keel, rigging, cockpit cover. |
Tippecanoe T27 RC Sailboat Build #9
Final paint of bottom and above the water line.
I started by carefully masking the top off leaving about an 1/8" down on each side. This will be left as varnished wood. I put gold automotive vinyl pin striping below this gunwale line later on.
I then used a red oxide automotive primer to do the whole hull.
I masked off the sides and painted the bottom a burgundy matte (to simulate red oxide bottom paint). In hindsight, I should have just left it primed with the primer.
Once dry, the bottom and top were masked off and the sides were painted dark navy blue.
I finished up with using the blue pin striping that came with the kit as a water line boot top, and gold 1/8" automotive pin stripes for just below the gunwale.



Tippecanoe T27 RC Sailboat Build #8
Finishing the deck, installation of rudder, radio equipment, final fitting of mast and rigging.
These photos show the final layout of the finished deck (4 coats of Epifanes!). The directions provided by Tippecanoe were pretty straightforward here. The only thing I am not happy with is the mast tends to rotate when sheeting the sails. I may try and engineer in a key to stop that from happening. Had I known this would be an issue, I would have built it into the mast step. But, solving these types of problems is part of the fun of building one of these.
Part of me wanted to leave the whole boat as varnished wood and just paint the bottom. But as you can see in the next post, I ended up painting above the waterline blue, and below the waterline red. I'm happy with the way it came out.








Tippecanoe T27 RC Sailboat Build #7
Coating the hull
This step was not covered in the directions that came with the boat. I have some West System 105 laying around and decided to seal the entire hull and deck with it. I applied a coat with a brush, let it set for 24 hours, and wet-sanded it smooth. This was repeated for 3 coats on the bottom (just one coat on the deck since it would be varnished).
I believe the epoxy that Tippecanoe provided is also West System. This is high quality epoxy and is very easy to work with. It does dry rock hard so sanding is a pain. Wet sanding with 220 then 400 for the final coat is recommended.
Later on, the deck received 4 coats of Epifanes Marine Varnish - another high quality product that I highly recommend. It flows nicely and I wet-sanded with 400 grit between each coat (24 drying time between each coat). The last coat was not wet sanded.

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