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RESTORATION AND REFIT (1995) Several months af ter being sailed back to Auckland f rom the Bay of Islands, Little Jim was lifted out and transported to The Boatyard at Hobson Wharf Maritime Museum in early April 1995 for a major ref it. |
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The objectives were to investigate and repair any structural
deterioration, restore the exterior as closely as possible to
the way she looked when launched in 1934 and to modernise her
very basic interior with a galley separate head and new chart
table while maintaining her classical character. Originally, it was intended to service and shift aft a 20
HP Buhk engine but the advantages of a smaller and modern Yanmar
diesel giving more power lead to the removal of the Buhk With the removal of the engine from the companionway, more space was opened up to allow a modest modern galley to be installed which included a freezer two burner stove, sink, and associated storage units. On the starboard side a chart table has been installed. Above the chart table following the complete rew wiring of the yacht, a new switchboard was installed. To maintain headroom with a lower cabin top, the cabin sole was lowered several inches. |
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Forward of the galley and the chart table the original bunks
have been retained but the Rimu backs have had the paint stripped
off and are now varnished as they were originally. On the forward
bulkhead wall a Winkleman photograph of the old Little Jim racing
under full canvas provides a nice link with the old schnapper
boat. A photograph of Bertha Wilson, the financer of her building,
is on the port side, and on the starboard a picture of Jim Mitchelson
and the crew at the Off icers Club in Alexandria during
the war. To port of the mast a new head is installed in little more than a cupboard but just sufficient to serve as a separate bathroom. The only change in the forward section is the installation of a self draining anchor locker to protect and keep gear stored forw ard dry. All the original deck fittings including a restored forward hatch have been retained. This includes a porthole salvaged from the w reck of the first Little Jim now installed in the same position on the forward part of the cabin top. Other deck fittings such as the cleats are those salvaged from the first Little Jim. The rigging designed by Bob Stewart in the 1960s has not been altered, although this is currently being reviewed with the intention of returning it to a more traditional cutter rig provided there will be no loss of performance. |
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