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Roger,To add a little to my piping story. As fabricators of the piping our responsibility ended when the piping was delivered to the dock down the street from out shop. But to our surprise, several specialists hired by the shipper arrived to oversee loading and our conference room became their office.
A stowage expert. This guy literally mapped out every piece of piping robe loaded within the ship’s cargo spaces. This included leaving one hold empty, but piping stowed on deck. I believe that the empty hold was later flooded to get under the Detroit River bridge
Cargo surveyors. These guys inspected the cargo to certify that it was in good condition when shipped.
The manager of the port’s stevedoring company. His guys did the actual loading. I believe that this included operating the vessel’s cargo gear.
A representative of the company insuring the cargo.
There were others that I don’t remember. My point is that shipping this piping was carefully planned by knowledgeable people within the marine shipping industry. I would assume that the same thing happens all of the time at ports around the world.
Roger


Your work is much cleaner than mine. My bulkheads weren’t numbered so I had to guess where they went. Several crumbled as I cut them, and I had to make new ones from scratch. I love your progress. Hopefully you can see some of my mistakes so you know how to avoid them.Sorry if I might be boring people with detail, I can post only major milestones if people prefer. Thinking through the details is how I work, I learned long ago in my work as an automotive accessories designer that there's no substitute for thinking and planning before grabbing the tools.
Here's more detail, I lowered the bulkheads today. I used a 3/4" wide scale to mark the locations for cuts to lower the bulkheads 3/4" and once marked I cut them with a razor blade.
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Work in progress, the five bulkheads in the center of the hull have been cut. The bulkheads still are just setting in place, not glued to the base yet.
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All bulkheads cut:
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Due to the flare of the hull, shortening the bulkheads makes them wider than the base at the bottom. I planned for this - when I cut the 1/4" plywood I'll be using as a sub-base to glue this entire assembly to I'll cut to the proper contour to match the bottoms of the bulkheads.
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If I'm posting too much detail I'll be happy to post less.
This is great info! I can use it in mine as well.Here’s a few drawings of cargo gear arrangements that may help if the plans are not clear enough
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