The boat came with a very nice teak table plonked down right in the middle of everywhere and taking up way too much room.
We finally just unbolted the thing shoved it under a bed. We've tried various folding and rolling and collapsing tables, but all of them found a way to piss us off in one way or another. Dogs and babies and coffee habits and boats and shitty tables don't go so well together - who knew?!?
So, after a year or so of staring and drooling, a masterpiece emerges. It's perfect. It's wonderful. Sadly, it's also a mockup of a real table, made from $14 of Home Depot ply"wood," (can wood be that shity??) mostly cut out with my trusty sawzall. The heavy-wall stainless and teak slidy-hinge-thingee is real enough, so I just need to find wood, skills, and/or tools, replicate the table, and screw it to the hinge-thingee. If anyone knows someone in the SF Bay area who'd like to make me a real table...
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The hinge is 2 pieces of 1.5" teak - crappy plantation stuff, but at least it was expensive - and 36" of heavy-wall 316 stainless tubing. The table is held on by 4-inch screws. |
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One bulkhead table, folded up out of the way |
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Folded down, folded up, slid in - it's almost entirely over the starboard setee and out of the way. |
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Open but not slid out, the boat is still mostly usable, although the head door won't open in this configuration. |
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Open and out. It's a couple inches narrower than the original table, and comfortably seats 4. |
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"Normal" position - easy access to head and V-berth, plenty of room for a laptop and legs. Also, I wanted to show that we really do own cushions. See the scars from the old table on the sole. |
I think this is going to work well.
Also, if someone wants to buy a pedestal-mount table made out of 5/4 old-growth teak, make me an offer.
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