- 2.6.3--33-17
- Item
Tilting-arbor plank cutter. Invented in Tacoma boatbuilding industry; allows plank to be cut with continuously changing bevel.
70550 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Tilting-arbor plank cutter. Invented in Tacoma boatbuilding industry; allows plank to be cut with continuously changing bevel.
George Chambers setting up shaft boring jig for rudder shaft on Trumbly-38 (T-38).
Patrick chapman making plank pattern for T-38, Bates.
George Chambers setting up shaft boring jig for rudder shaft on Trumbly-38 (T-38).
Dan Hubley plugging screw holes on T-38, Bates.
T-38, Bates, spring/summer 1978, topsides; cabin framed but not decked.
George Chambers setting up shaft boring jig for rudder shaft on Trumbly-38.
Dean Goodrich (fore) and another student beginning to lay decking on T-38.
Bates - view of T-38 hull, front side view.
Students working on cabin top of T-38.
Students working on topsides of T-38.
Bates boatbuilding, keel of T-38.
Bates boatbuilding, keel of T-38.
Dean Goodrich plugging countersink holes on T-38.
Bench being framed inside cabin of T-38.
T-38, people working in open cabin; head at lower right, Tom Mankin.
T-38 under construction, Bates courtyard. (Two students installing plank.)
T-38. (Student installing a plank.)
George Chambers setting up shaft boring jig for rudder shaft on Trumbly-38 (T-38). Patrick Chapman center, Dean Goodrich right.
George Chambers setting up shaft boring jig for rudder shaft on Trumbly-38. Keel of T-38.
Dean Goodrich (fore) and another student beginning to lay decking on T-38.
T-38, forward planking, with partly caulked seam.