JESPERSEN BOAT BUILDERS LTD.
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ARRIVING AT JESPERSENS Saga

The owners of Saga,
a very actively raced
6 metre from Puget
Sound, had been
contemplating frame
repairs for some time.
Once our schedules
were coordinated,
Saga was towed from
Bainbridge Island near
Seattle

. In similar fashion as for
Buzzy III, Saga’s broken
frames, 24 pairs, were
removed in small sections, patterns taken and new
frames laminated of white
oak. The hard turn of the
bilge is a common place for steambent frames to break.
BROKEN FRAMES
WORK BEGINS Because the upper
portions of the frames
were in excellent
condition we chose to
cut long scarf joints
staggered over the
relatively even
deadrise and glue the
new frames to the old.
The sided dimension
of the new pieces
was increased for
strength as there
are very few
transverse floor
timbers on Saga.
Where these existed,
the molded frame
thickness was also
increased to allow us
to bolt to the floors
where no fastenings
existed before. .
BOLT TO THE FLOORS
REMOVE THE GARBOARD
We were able to
complete the repair
by only removing the
garboard, giving us
access to the most
difficult frame ends.
This meant less work
replanking. We reused
the original garboard.
Other items addressed
included new cockpit
seats, some alterations
to the companionway
bulkhead, forestay
fitting and mast collar.
Back in the water and
racing, Saga placed
first in the Sir Thomas
Lipton Cup, Sept. 2002.
ALTERATIONS COMPLETE
  

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