Saturday was a fantastically lucky day of dumpster diving. Muncie Tent and Awning kindly left an old Subway Sandwiches vinyl awning in their dumpster, which took a little piecing together, but should make a superb skin.
A giant dumpster next to the railroad tracks contained lots of fiberglass and aluminum railroad crossing drop-arms, featuring the reflective caution stripes. Alas, if we were making a huge boat they would have been fun to use. Instead, we took some 3/4″ plywood pieces that are finding a second life as the cross-sectional formers.
Twenty feet away from Muncie’s old Bob Evans is a brand new Bob Evans under construction, and it yielded two 4′x8′ sheets of 1/4″ Georgia Pacific plywood, held together for some reason by a number of “premium” 2×4 studs. Many of the studs were cut to very sharp angles, and they wound up jutting out of the bow and stern of what now looks like a war canoe. Adam suggested that we use the thin plywood as the floor of the canoe, where as before it was going to be PVC stringers all around the sides and bottom. As a result, we could put more rows of stringers on the sides, making the thing more sturdy.
The only things we’ve had to buy are 11 PVC pipes (1/2″ ID, 7/8″ OD, 10′ long), a wooden curtain rod and a bamboo pole for paddle handles, and a tube of PL Premium construction adhesive. I think we’re up to $25 or so.
We will hopefully be able to run the river in a few weeks. In the mean time, watch my Flickr for more photos from build day.