John Martin wrote:Hi Steve,
Did you make the belaying pins? If so, how? Did you buy them? If so, where? How much? I have a need for about 12 of them aboard Carina.
John
John, I did make my belaying pins.
When they were building the Amistad at Mystic Seaport I was involved with a wood turning club that was contacted to turn all the pins. As a result I have three belaying pins with my initials on the ends aboard the Amistad.
As a thank you for our work, we were given a private guided tour of the ship building facilities. We were also turned lose on a couple of pallets of scarp wood left over from the project. So I had the patterns for the pins and some nice Angelique that was shipped from Africa for the Amistad. The pins on the Amistad are all wood and a bit large for a Cape Dory so I reduced them and went with 1/2" stainless round rod for the pins. I wanted to use bronze but the cost was pretty high to go that route.
Making the pins was fairly easy if a bit time consuming. I first cut the stainless to 12" lengths and rounded one end. I then cut blanks and drilled a slightly over sized hole in the end for the pins. To be sure they stayed in there I ground a bunch of spirals in the pins and epoxied them into the blanks. The spirals also help to let the air out when you are pushing the pins into the epoxy. It was then just a matter of chucking the pins in the lathe and turning the handles. The hardest part is getting them all the same but you make a few depth cuts and then eye ball the rest. You get much faster and and better at it as you progress. The Angelique turns very nicely as it is hard and greasy much like teak.
I really like the idea of having different woods on the boat that have some connection with other people, places or events. Overall it was a fun and rewarding project, Steve.