My latest project...aka interesting job site.

epicxt

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Jan 24, 2012
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Took on a job demo-ing and re-fitting two staterooms on a working tug boat.
I haven't done a ton of marine jobs, but managed to get my foot in the door on this one which could lead to a lot of future work as this is for a large company with a lot of tugs in their fleet.
Here's a pic of my cut station last weekend (non-typical Seattle winter weather). Might be tough to pick everything out from the cell phone pic.
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Unfortunately I haven't been taking a ton of pics, but the next shot is a sample of what the staterooms looked like after demo was mostly finished.
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And here's a shot of the bulkheads with the paneling partially complete.
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Grr, one photo didn't upload right. Can't seem to mess with the photo using Tapatalk, so I'll try loading it again. Here goes...
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I love boats and the ocean even though I'm in land-locked North Dakota.

What will the final project be like? Really utilitarian construction, or something a little more high-end? What kind of challenges do you run into working on a boat besides carrying materials down the gangway?
 
Jasonj888 said:
I love boats and the ocean even though I'm in land-locked North Dakota.

What will the final project be like? Really utilitarian construction, or something a little more high-end? What kind of challenges do you run into working on a boat besides carrying materials down the gangway?

I bet it's pretty hard to plumb or level anything. [tongue]
 
Never use a level on a boat just square everything thing off the i beams. Also always get permission before you penetrate any floors. If you accidentally drill into a tank you wont be getting anymore jobs! If you do good work and meet deadlines the boats can be a goldmine. When boats are tied up for overhaul they are costing the company money everyday so they are willing to pay to get them back out.
 
^This!^
The staterooms are directly above the fuel tanks! And yes, level is a relative term. Pretty much just have to make sure the bunks and lockers feel and look right. Not a lot of straight lines to work with.
It'll be a busy weekend for me, but should be able to beat the mechs that are rebuilding the engines. :)
 
Oh, and Jason, it's pretty utilitarian on this boat. Not some of my finest work, but a big improvement from what it was.
 
Look forward to seeing the finished project. Wish I was working with you rather than sitting in the snow and ice.
 
Hah! Yeah, we've been having a super-mild winter here, even by Seattle standards, although the sunny pic was just over last weekend. Enjoy your briskness!
 
Realized I had started this thread but didn't continue it. Here's some pics of the completed staterooms. Pics aren't great as you can't get a very wide field of vision with an iPhone.
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Looks like there's a good chance I'll be starting another larger maybe nicer one next month after it gets back from major repairs in Canada.
 
Nice work. It looks like a really challenging (small) environment to work in, probably tough to carry materials and tools in and out of.

I'm not sure what I was expecting for a working tugboat, but it looks much higher-end than I thought it would.
 
Well, you gotta keep the crew happy! I think I may have overshot their quality expectations a bit with the cab doors and drawers with solid cvg edge banding (20 dominos in each door) but they only blinked once at the bill. ;)

I'd say the most challenging aspect was when I was doing glue ups in the (unheated) shipyard shop the temps dropped below freezing so I was forced to assemble my glue ups and then run them down to the (heated) boat to cure, then take them back to the shop to finish out. This added a fair amount of time and stress, but managed to finish before they were scheduled to leave (barely)!
 
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