I am about to start in on my new project boat. She is a 1963 Islander 32. I found it as an insurance salvage, got a good deal, and just had it delivered last weekend. So now I have an enourmous boat in my yard (just what I've always wanted) and have started to tear her apart for the restoration.
The plan is for a two year refit and restoration including every surface and system. The engine is a Yanmar 2QM that will be pulled for a rebuild (which I'll be doing myself), the mast is gone save for the bottom six feet, the boom and pole are present. The previous owner had made some major modifications including a 3' bow sprint which may or may not stay, external chain plates, lots of tankage, covering the saloon windows with opening ports, some odd plywood stuff in the cockpit, and all the other things that happen along the way to a 44 year old boat.
At this stage we are stripping the hull down, pulling the engine, and generally getting it clean and tidy to get the real work started. So, here is my first question for the group. I've got an oily bilge, oily, nasty, generally gross. There is oil soaked into a lot of the lower woodwork around the engine compartment and bilge area. How do I go about cleaning this completely, to ready it for paint?
If anyone is familiar with the Mark I Islander 32s I would love to hear some comments. I am on the Islander SailNet list, and have some information from the Islander Owners group, but anything else would be helpful.
Tim, your Triton site will be a constant reference for my project, right along with Dan Spur's books, 'This Old Boat,' 'Good Old Boat,' and all that other good stuff.
I am a graduate student with a major passion for sailing. A few years ago I had rennovated a '77 Hunter 27 and lived on board with some friends, tooling around the Bahamas so I do have some practical experience. I am a decent woodworker, decent mechanic, and have read most of what is available on designing/building/restoring old boats. This will be my biggest project to date, and I'll be asking a lot of questions here, hopefully I'll be contributing as well.
Here's the boat in all her glory, the staging will be build in the next week and a shed over it all soon. And, yes, my boat rode in on a short bus.
David



