Saturday 5 October 2013

DIY Tiller Pin

Hi all,
I'm dead chuffed with myself tonight.

Chris and I have been looking at tiller pins for AmyJo but have not been able to find anything that takes our fancy.  With our sailing background we really wanted something that relates to sailing boats.  We looked around and simply could not find any sail boat tiller pins.

I did bit more Googling and realised that most tiller pins consisted of a brass ornament with a stainless rod, usually 6mm to 8mm diameter, screwed into its base.  So I searched around for a brass sailing boat ornament or paper weight but most of them consisted of tall, sharp and pointed sails, far too dangerous for my liking.  

I was about to give up on the idea when I came across a brass sailing boat about 4 inches tall with sails that would not act as a dagger and thought it would make a suitable tiller pin, but, how to make it into one?

My metalwork skills have never been that good but when Roy passed away I inherited several taps and dies suitable for creating threads.  I looked through these and found a tap and die for an M6 metric thread and resolved to have a go at it myself.

I purchased some 6mm 316 stainless steel rod and set about cutting a thread on it with the die.  Once that was done I carefully mounted the brass sailing boat in a vice.  Drilled a 5mm hole in its base and then tapped out an M6 thread into it. Screwed the rod into the sailing boat and voila ....




I'm really pleased with the result if I may say so myself.  As AmyJo's fittings are mainly chromium the next step is to get the sail boat Chromed so it matches the rest of the fittings

5 comments:

nb Chance said...

Be interested to know how you get on with the chroming. We were trying to get our mushroom vents re-chromed the cost worked out more than buying new ones! The tiller pin looks great and so unique!

nb Chance said...

Be interested to know how you get on with the chroming. We were trying to get our mushroom vents re-chromed the cost worked out more than buying new ones! The tiller pin looks great and so unique!

nb AmyJo said...

Hi Doug and James
I found a place in Crewe called Niphos (http://www.niphos.co.uk/)and the guy there was really good. He's quoted a really good price, far less than I thought it would be.

I'll let you know how I get on and the quality of the workmanship

Wozie said...

Hello, the tiller pin that Fernwood provided for Oakfield plopped off into the canal while we were cruising!
After making an excellent prototype tillerpin for AmyJo perhaps you could make more to trade when you are cruising!

nb AmyJo said...

Hi Wozie,
Umm got me thinking now. Not a bad idea that :-)