Steve Laume wrote:You have now won the prize for the nastiest original wiring ever seen on a Cape Dory. At least you will not be tempted to clean up and reused what is there.
What is going in the flat space next to the tach on the control board? I really like the idea of having things up where you can see them, Steve.
The wiring was a mess. I look like I worked a double shift in the coal mines each time I work on her.
Regarding the Nav Pod, the flat spot is probably going to house the autopilot control. Since the radar/chart plotter and depth are on a panel that is up high, this panel will be mounted below the center of the wheel (as it is designed) but still very visible.
Russell wrote:With the cabnetry removed the damage does not look as bad as it could have been. The fire seemed to try its best to restrict itsself to wire. Do you see any damage to the bridgedeck fibreglass now that you have some of the plywood removed?
Are you going to restore the galley cabnets to origonal? Or do something new? All the drawer fronts and such looked salvageable, it looked like the ply could mostly be reused as well with just some new formica on it.
I think the origonal setup works pretty well, though one change I would make if I were redoing it, is the sliding door storage, I would make the doors full height (about 3" taller), getting tall bottles and boxes in and out, which do fit once inside, is a pain with the slightly too short doors.
Most of the glass damage was to the layer that was below the layer that is the bridge. That said I will be epoxying some ply and glass underneath of the bridge since some epoxy burned off. It flexes a bit too much to ignore.
The galley design could be put back to exactly how it was. As you mentioned, all the tricky teak parts survived. I am considering a design change that incorporates the teak door from the engine room access area. It is way too nice to be hidden in the quarter berth, plus it would make the sliding door area almost full height. Not 100% sure yet. The electrical panels and the clean up first, then get it to VA, then probably finish the cabinets this winter.
Wow, that really does work!! At this point I cannot imagine that much shine. I do like the teak rather than the Formica. And I have a bunch of teak from another project... Hummmmmm.