| 
  
                Creating an access hatch in an airbox 
                By Andrew Linn 
              I have built a Puddle Duck Racer (www.pdracer.com 
                for the official website). One of the very few design rules for 
                a Puddle Duck Racer is that it has floatation installed. I figured 
                on getting a couple of 'pool noodles' and stuff them in and call 
                it good. Then I read the Flotation article 
                on the Puddle Duck Racer website and decided I would make air 
                boxes by enclosing the fore and aft deck areas instead. 
                
              I figured the air box would be the lightest and cheapest possible 
                way to provide floatation. And as a plus, I can use the area for 
                dry storage of lunch and such. All I had to do was install waterproof 
                access hatches. 
              First I had to select the proper material to make the hatch out 
                of. What is needed is a closable lid - optimally a screw-on lid. 
                Chlorine - used to maintain pools - comes in screw-top buckets, 
                but the local pool supply company didn't have any empty buckets, 
                and I don't have a pool, so I went away empty handed. I went to 
                a health club - which has an Olympic sized pool. They get their 
                chemicals in 15 gallon buckets with lids 18 inches in diameter. 
                Too big for my needs. I then went to a hotel that has a pool. 
                The handyman gave me a gallon bucket with screw-top lid. The lid 
                is just over 12 inches in diameter, fine for the aft air box, 
                but too big for the fore air box. 
              I needed something with a removable lid that was both big enough 
                for me to reach into and pass things through, but still less than 
                9 inches in diameter. I went to the local Wal-Mart and found a 
                parrot food container that would have worked, but I have no parrot. 
                I found a kitty litter container that would have worked, but I 
                have no cats. I found a food container with about a 5 inch diameter 
                screw top lid that I would have gotten, but it cost $2.00, and 
                I am too cheap for that. 
                
              I settled for this empty margarine container I had lying around. 
                The lid snaps on tight, it is big enough for - maybe 7 inches 
                in diameter, and the price is right.  
                
               I started by marking a straight line around the container - 
                I used some masking tape as a guide since I couldn't find my Sharpie 
                - and then cutting it with a razor knife. This will form the wall 
                of the hatch, and must be long enough to go through your bulkhead 
                and leave enough sticking out for attaching the lid. I cut it 
                long so I could trim it later.  
                
               I had cut out the bulkhead already, and I traced around the 
                outside of the hatch wall. 
                
               I drilled a starting hole - big enough for my jigsaw blade, 
                inside the circle and close to the line. 
                
               The jigsaw went smoothly around the circle and made a nice opening 
                for the hatch. I used a new blade - one that was supposed to leave 
                a smooth cut on both sides of the plywood. It did a fair job. 
               
                
               With my razor knife, I cut off most of the excess.  
                
               I laid a bead of adhesive around the lip that will be in contact 
                with the wood. I used Liquid Nails because it is cheap, sticky, 
                dries hard, and is strong. 
                
               I crammed the hatch wall through the hole and held it there 
                under pressure for a few minutes. I then applied another bead 
                of adhesive to act as caulking, and because I like to play with 
                caulking guns. 
                
               I flipped the assembly over and laid a bead overlapping the 
                edge of the wall and spreading onto the bulkhead. I hope this 
                helps keep the margarine tub secure to the bulkhead. 
                
               I then installed the bulkhead and caulked the seams. The idea 
                is to have a waterproof box, so I glued the bulkhead with Elmer's 
                Ultimate polyurethane glue - cheap knockoff of Gorilla Glue. This 
                stuff foams up while it cures - filling in gaps and such. 
                
               Finished air box with waterproof access hatch. Cheap and easy. 
                A note on caulking: I used whatever caulk was in the gun from 
                the last project - in this case Kitchen and Bathroom caulk. This 
                type of caulk does not hold paint well at all. Spend the $1.57 
                for some paintable caulk. 
                |