Back to Schooner Mahdee Frames and Floors

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When we first saw Mahdee in February 2006, we could remove the sole and get a look at many of the floors. We also had access to see most of the boat's frames. The previous owner, in preparation for re-fitting Mahdee himself, had removed much of the boat's interior. So, with just a bit of her ceiling and furniture in place, we had only a few areas that we couldn't access (see saloon seating, left). In the forecastle (see 2 pics below left), we could see several frames with rot due to freshwater coming through the deck.

In August, we worked to remove the remaining furniture and sole to reveal the floor timbers and all the frames. During this time, we confirmed the yard shipwrights' initial assessment that there could be enough "iron sickness" in the frames to warrant replacing all of them. The frames are 2 ¾" x 2 ¾" white oak, steamed and placed at 12" intervals. In the midsection, there are additional "intermediate" frames. Many frames looked to be in perfect condition. Steaming oak frames is not an available option for our new frames.

When we removed and split test sections of what looked to be good oak, we found enough iron sickness inside the frames to convince us to go ahead and replace all frames with either doublesawn or laminated frames. We preferred doublesawn frames but realized the added weight and construction cost would limit us in using this method throughout the boat.

We compromised with the decision to use sawn frames in the forward end of the forecastle (frames 1 through 5) and to make every-other-frame in the forward engine room doublesawn (the odd # frames 7-17) with the other half being laminated (even # frames 6-16). In the remainder of the boat, the use of intermediate frames makes it impossibly tight to install doublesawn frames and keep the intermediates. The yard shipwright did advise us that the intermediate frames were extreme "overkill" and might be omitted from the rebuild to save weight and construction cost. However, one of the reasons we selected Mahdee was for her stout construction as designed by SS Crocker. We had read about Crocker's use of intermediate frames in a Bud McIntosh book and we wanted them to remain in the boat.

Initially, the plan was to simply remove odd # frames from 17 forward, replace them as we go with a doublesawn frame using the Angelique on hand at the boat yard and then (when wood for laminating had been procured) remove and replace the even number frames in the forward section of the boat with laminated frames. This method should have allowed us to keep the boat's shape as we went along.

Things don't always go as planned. An industrious yardworker removed the stem and stem knee weeks before the wood could be procured to replace them. An equally energetic yardworker, tasked with removing the cap rail from the foredeck bulwark, went ahead and removed the frame tops extending through the deck as stanchions as well as the bulwark planking and covering board. Four station molds were put in place to ensure the integrity of the shape until the yard had time for the shipwright or a yard carpenter to begin work on the doublesawn frames and new floors.

Above left and right: demo reveals frames and floors
Left: temporary station molds
Below left: sawn frame futtock being made
Below right: delivery of wood including purpleheart for floors
 

The floors are constructed of a tropical hardwood, Purpleheart (Peltogyne spp. Family: Leguminosae). It is extremely rot resistant. The original floors were white oak. We initially looked about for large white oak timbers, but determined the wood couldn't be easily procured in the large dimensions and thicknesses needed. The cross section, of some mid-section floor timbers, is up to 5" thick by 9" to 11" tall.

The sawn frames are constructed of another rot resistant hardwood, Angelique (Dicorynia guianensis). We should have been able to procure white oak 3" thick for the sawn frames. The angelique was available in the yard and has superior rot resistance.

The floors are installed with drifts (odd # stations forward of #15) and keelbolts ranging in diameter from 5/8" to 1" silicon bronze. The doublesawn frames are bolted together and to the floors with 3/8" silicon bronze carriage bolts. The frame-to-planking fasteners are #18 and #16 silicon bronze screws.

Above left: two floors waiting to be installed by David
Above right: view of doublesawn frames and new floors
Left: debris from frame and floor removal

Far left: Drift removed. While the top is bright and shows little corrosion, the bottom is pink all the way through. The drifts removed from the floors were all found to be in poor condition but this one is probably the most corroded we've pulled.

Left: Keelbolt removed. The keelbolts all have been very stubborn to remove, but they have been in surprisingly good shape.


Far left:
David threads a section of bronze rod for a keel bolt.

Left: Renee and David use a right angle drill to place a 2 1/4" counterbore in the lead keel for the nut at the bottom of a 7/8" diameter keelbolt. It takes two people to hold the drill steady. To peform this task, a counterbore bit is fit with a special pilot that is the same diameter as the keelbolt.

Far Left: The doublesawn frames are complete and it is time to move on to laminated frames. In this photo, the first four (stations #6, #8, #10, #12) laminated frames are in place. The rest are doublesawn.

Light: The shed roof is too low to allow laminated frames to be dropped in behind the clamp. As the autumn daylight wanes, more planking above the waterline is removed to enable bending in place the laminated frames. The boat "glows" with the light of work going on inside.

The frames are laminated of mahogany and epoxy. The epoxy is put onto each 1/4" lamination in a trough to contain the mess. At right, John is preparing a frame for the boat's midsection. Initially, the forward laminations were held in place by wedging wood against the deck beams. Later, David cut a couple "alligator boards" to clamp to the deck beams. These are shown at the far right. The boards provide a "grip" for the long wood pieces used to help wedge the laminated frame against the planking. Packing tape is used on every surface that can get accidentally glued to the frame during lamination. This includes the floor and the planking. Below is a series of photos of David installing a frame. John also works outside the boat with additional clamps along the upper portion of the frame.
1: Getting the frame into the boat2: Its very long3: Its tight under a rabbet in the floor timber4: Pounding and clamping it tight against the floor5: Using a hand-screw clamp to align laminates
 
6: Clamping along the turn7: Apply pressure 8: The boat becomes a forest of wedged boards2: The alligators work nicely 

Far left: Clamps to port

Mid-left: Camps inside

Left: Clamps to starboard

 

 

After frames have cured for a couple days, they are removed from the boat, cleaned up, and sanded. Voids are filled and the entire frame is sealed before the frames are re-installed with screws to the planking and 3/8" bolts to the floors.

The Floors and Frames project is complete! The "final" work can be seen Here
The work was completed by April 2007. The majority of the work was completed by mid-March. We had a "Rib Day" party to celebrate the completion. Rib Day party pics can be seen here.