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With the hull glassed, skeg added and the bottom coated
with HydroCoat antifouling paint it was time to roll it. I had given
the process a good bit of thought. It was going to be a little more
complicated because I could not just lift one side and allow it to flip
over. My shop did not afford the width to allow it to happen. Instead, it
needed to be rotated in place by dropping one side to the floor and
dragging it across while raising the other. I had several friends that had
volunteered to help but when the day came I decided to do it solo. I just
felt being able to take my time and think my way through it would be
better without the distraction of the helpers.



I first built a
"roll over" structure around the hull to cushion the hull and provide
hard-points for floor contact. I then removed some ceiling tile and bolted
two fabricated rollers to the rafters. These would allow the nylon straps
to shift without binding. I bolted two pieces of 1/2" x 4" angle iron to
the floor on one side. I had cut hole in one side of each of these to
accept the hook of the chain wenches I had borrowed. I also had two cable
wenches that were to be used to drag the hull across the floor. With all
in place it was time to start cranking wenches.

The
first step was to pickup one side just enough to allow part of the
building structure to be removed. Then I lowered it to the
floor.

With
one side sitting on the floor the lifting straps were moved to the other
side. The hull was then raised to allow complete removal of the building
fixture. The cable wenches were attached to pull it across the
floor.

As you
would expect, going past center had a high pucker factor. As it did the
bow slid to the left about three feet stopping about 2 inches from my dust
collection system. In this photo I had already pulled it back into
posistion.

Continuing to lower. On the down hill side
now.

And
here she is blocked and level. From start to finish it took about 3
hours.

The
first view of the interior made me smile. Can't tell you how many times I
had crawled under it with a flash light to clean away glue squeeze
out. But now it was all worth it as it look very clean.
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