This Wednesday began early. The
kids were up and I could feel Tucker bounding from spot to spot as his morning
eagerness tested the sturdiness of the hilltop ranch house and rattled the
spring box of my cozy twin bed.
Chris had met Bill and me at the
bus depot in Lebanon, New Hampshire. Our longest delay in today's journey had
been for two hours at the end, in Boston's Logan Airport. The next Dartmouth
Coach would leave terminal C at 6:55pm. A Reuben sandwich, fries, and a $6.95
pint of IPA at the Ale and Eatery pacified my intolerance for idle waits.
Ernie appeared to be a well
seasoned and mellowed coachman. His 40 foot behemoth MCI Dartmouth bus had no
foes on the highways north towards our homes for the next few weeks in Barnard,
Vermont. I had loaded a version of casino craps onto my iPad and I was soon to
discover that for the combined graces of the craps game, the impenetrable view
through the glazed windows onto the unlighted scenes outside, and my middle of
the coach seat, I was kept non-witness to the hazards being presented as we
were hurled through a severe northeastern blizzard on snow packed roads.
Sara had been sound asleep when we dropped
Bill off at the Fan House, Sara's B&B in Barnard. For the first few minutes
Sara thought we were guests scheduled to arrive at the weekend. Once fully
alert, we had a nice, albeit short, visit.
Chris then forged his jeep over the snow and ice packed road to his half
mile driveway, tucked into the hillside half way between Barnard and Bethel. It
was a good feeling to be safely inside his generously wood-warmed front room.
We waited until late morning to
leave for the short drive to Bethel. Over the years refuse from the kitchen
garbage disposal had slowly built up a blockage in the cast steel sewage byways
suspended beneath the sprawling ranch style home. A plumber's assistant, and
his employer had been called in to locate, and destroy the hidden obstruction
site. Chris and I got to avoid the visit.
Chris has rented a couple thousand
feet of street frontage space, which is soon to become the factory for Alpaca
guitars. The building at 216 Main Street was last occupied by a grocery store.
There is only one through street in Bethel, Vermont. There are no stop signs on Main Street. A
sidewalk separates the old store's aluminum clad wall, with two protruding
windows, from the occasionally trafficked roadway. As Chris crunched the Jeep's
wheels into the packed snow at the curb's edge he noticed that a snow blower
had worked the street since his last visit. The aluminum siding and windows
were blotched with the melt of recently hurled snow.
Today our initial job is to build
a wall to divide the entry area, which is going to serve as office, public
reception and finished product display, from a larger space to be used for
finished tooling and assembly. The finishing room will be noisy and
interruptive to other business activities.
The Alpaca guitar will be molded,
using plant derived epoxy resins and fabrics made from plant fibers. A lot of
thought and research has gone into manufacturing a very eco-conscious musical
instrument. The same spirit guided the design of the new wall.
Two by four studs were used for
the framing of the wall. From that point on, it was all recycled. I held an
image in my head about all of the magnificent multistoried red barns populating
the fields and farm yards on the road from Chris' home to downtown Bethel. They
aren't, however, all used for the betterment of livestock. Some are used to
hide treasure troves of no longer needed or wanted building products. In one
barn Chris found a dozen old double hung windows. In another, he found a stack
of doors; some solid core, and some hollow core. We needed some of both kinds.
Where the new wall didn't hold windows, it needed siding. A pile of 15 foot
long edge trim planks was found on a refuse pile at a nearby sawmill.
The closest source for the MDF is
Home Depot, in Lebanon. We spent the rest of the day driving there and back.
Six of the large sheets were required. We were able to have them all cut to
their largest single dimensions while at the store. This made handling the
pieces much easier. A full sheet of 3/4" MDF weighs over 90 pounds. Chris
also picked up a finishing nail gun and a gallon of Tightbond II wood glue. We
would go through over 3 pints of glue on this single table. All of the cut
pieces fit on the jeep's roof rack and we were back and unloaded just before
the phone rang for dinner.
Chris and I quickly cut out and
assembled one more finishing table. Having moved three tables to the molding
room, Chris felt he would need one more table in the finishing room. Bill came
over just before lunch time. He and Chris got stuck into mounting rails on the
torsion box for the gantry to roll on. Like a narrow gauge railroad, the gantry
rails needed to be precisely parallel. The measurements came out perfectly.
The gantry holds the spindle, a
router without handles, and it holds the servo-motors which will guide the
gantry up and down the length of the table, the spindle back and forth across
the gantry, and the spindle up and down on the gantry as it is traveling the
length and width of the torsion table. The spindle itself is mounted on a
miniature gantry gliding on rails mounted on top of the main gantry. The
smaller gantry permits movement of the spindle across the table. But wait, on
the side of the small gantry the spindle mounting block can move up and down on
its own set of rails. As a result, the spindle's cutting bit can traverse the
whole surface of a 4x8 foot plane and do it while moving up and down a 9"
height. The X, Y and Z axis movement of the spindle in done with fine chains
and sprockets which can control the bit's position to within 0.001mm, or 1
micro.
While Chris labored on the CNC
machine, I set up the upstairs vacuum pump, vacuum tank and 1/2" pvc
vacuum lines to the mold room. I mounted the 1/2" pipe about 20"
above the two curing tables. At 18" intervals, I cut the pipe and
installed a T-junction, 10 of them altogether. On each T-junction I mounted a
tube bib to connect to 1/8" i.d. vacuum hoses. Each vacuum tube can be
opened, or closed, with a pinch clamp. The tube then connects to a polyvinyl
bag holding a fresh mold. The vacuum process evacuates any laid up air trapped
in the fabric.
Chris decoded the CNC computer and
had the gantry gently moving about the torsion table in the X and Y axis
directions. It may be a couple of days yet before the Z axis replacement pieces
arrive. When they do, he will be able to calibrate the spindle, router, over
its whole range of motion. On top of the torsion table will be a 4x 8 foot of
1/4" to 1/2" plywood, or MDF. This sheet will provide over shot
protection for the torsion table top. When the scab sheet is attached, Chris
will program the spindle to skim over the new layer and shave where needed to
achieve a perfectly flat surface for the spindles reference.
Matt and Andrew were coming to the
shop today to begin construction of the tote bags which go with each guitar.
The bags are to be made out of organic cotton canvas. Chris has received the
67" long, 80 pound roll of canvas. The roll has been hoisted onto the rack
behind the fabric cutting table.
Andrew felt the front area need
some sparking up. He and Matt teamed up to achieve what may have seemed to them
as the impossible. Matt cleaned the deck over the mold room, made mounts to
hang the Wi-Fi and telephone equipment in the phone hallway, and worked atop
the ladder and removed all of the display peg board which once surrounded the
inside of the old grocery store. Andrew visited the hardware store and returned
with a quart of brown paint to dress up the window trim. He foraged in the back
recesses and came out with a gallon of white paint to be used on the walls.
Things quickly began to take on a fresher look.
Chris has worked up programming which
commands the CNC machine to carve out words. The spindle is still not mounted,
so only the X and Y axis are functioning. In lieu of a spindle, Chris taped a
pencil to the gantry. He taped paper to the top of the torsion table. Instead
of a carved piece, Chris' result was a very accurately drawn banner, which
read, "Chris"; a small step for mankind, but a huge leap for Alpaca
Guitar. It was exciting to see the output of this complicated piece of
equipment.
The Z-axis spindle brackets
finally came in. Chris had gone to bed last night with a stuffed up head. He
slept in and stayed home today. Bill joined me at the shop and together we
muddled through this last part of the erector set. The final hook up will be
left for Chris.
I visited the hardware store
across the street and bought some 4" flexible dryer duct, a few angle
junctions and some large straps. My next job was to run the ducting and hook up
the CNC vacuum system. This task took the best part of a day. The final thing
needed for the vacuum system was to install a ground strap from the metal duct
to a nearby electrical spot. A huge amount of static voltage can build up on
this system and if it is not well grounded, it could seriously shock, or worse,
ruin the computer.
One day we planned to do no more
carving until we resolved failing parts on the CNC. It turned out the sprockets
and attached bearings had been made in China. Glue had been used to hold the
sprockets to their bearings. Under load, the glue broke and the sprockets spun
freely, causing no movement. We took the machine apart and used a punch to peen
all of the sprockets. At the end of the day we were ready, and confident we had
improved the machine.
A week and half later I was ready to
apply lacquer to the assembled plug. The plug was made up of three separate
layers. Each layer created a line which required multiple applications of wood
putty. In the wait times while the CNC was cutting and while the later coats of
lacquer were drying, I was kept busy with infrastructure jobs.
One sunny day I spent spray painting a new white cover on the weathered outside vinyl lath. The building has seen a couple of decades since cosmetic attention has been paid to it. Another day I scraped and painted the eave. I installed a knob and lock on an inner door and found the pieces of a threefold door which I made into a one piece door. More scrubbing, and then some paint was applied to the inside of the front door. I refinished a bench on the sidewalk near the front door. The list of fix ups was long.
After each lacquer coat dried, I sanded imperfections and discovered new spots where spackle could be used. Finally, I had a plug that shined in all places; was smooth to the touch and ready for the next step.
The secret to applying pva is to
do so without creating runs or other spray blemishes. Since the pva becomes the
plug, as the resin sees it, blemishes will show in the result. I had set up an
outback spray table so pva could be applied without the need for venting. At
the end of the day Chris applied a coat to the plug. We brought it inside for
the night and went home.
At noon today Rebecca is going to
pick me up at the office and drive me to Lebanon to catch the bus to Boston's
Logan airport. I got up early and drove the boys to the bus stop, where we said
quick goodbyes. That was sad. After breakfast I said goodbye to Jennifer, and
Chris and I loaded bags into his jeep. I still had four hours I could use to
help at the shop.
We discovered that the pva applied
to the plug last night had run. I washed it down, dried it off, and got it
ready for a series of re-sprays. I used a heat gun to speed the drying steps.
We put on five coats of pva before we called it good. The end result was a satin-like
surface. We both thought this would be more user friendly that a mirror finish.
If it doesn't look and feel good, it can be changed on the next mold cast.
Rebecca pulled up outside on
schedule. It was hard for me to say goodbye to Chris. We had spent six weeks,
working each day, and I was leaving on the eve of the result. Chris is a great
team leader and Alpaca Guitar Company will do well. I look forward to a return,
with Anne, in our new coach to see how the production line is working. Go get 'em
Chris.