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      Flying Mouse is an exercise to develop just 
      about the smallest, cheapest possible sailing boat I can conceive. As a 
      result, it's not a boat to which you can safely trust your life in any 
      sort of waves - as anyone who climbs into a Flying Mouse will quickly 
      realise. Nevertheless, and I think it is capable of providing hours of 
      summer fun in a strictly supervised environment, which isn't bad for a 
      boat this cheap to build.  
      My guess is that Flying Mouse can quickly be 
      knocked up in 24-40 hours of work, using the kitchen table as a workbench 
      if you have to. The main material is intended to be 1/4in hardwood ply; 
      the main hull takes one sheet, while the remainder is intended come out of 
      an extra one and a half sheets. The framing should probably be inch by 
      half inch or so pine, although just about any cheap lumber will probably 
      do. The stitch and glue should be epoxy and glass tape; other glues may be 
      of cheaper varieties such as polyurethane.  
      The mast is marked as being tapered, although 
      I suspect that a straight-sided closet pole could serve.  
      Please refer to
      David Grey's 
      Polysail website or other authoritative source for instructions on how 
      to make suitable sails. 
      An email discussion group for builders and 
      users of this boat has been created at: 
      
      
      https://groups.yahoo.com/group/mouseboats  
      This zip file includes: 
      - a gif showing the lines 
      - construction details in both gif and dxf 
      forms 
      - coordinates for cutting out the ply 
      material for both hull and decking using a batten 
      - a table of offsets for Flying Mouse 
      - a Hulls file for Flying Mouse  
      - this readme file 
      All drawings copyright Gavin Atkin, Tunbridge 
      Wells, April 2001  
      Contact: 
      
      gmatkin@clara.net  |