Last night I took the clamps and weights off the hatch and trimmed the edges of the inner skin flush with the edges of the frame. So far no spring back. There is only one place where the PL glue didn't adhere the skin to the frame, and the lovely and gracious Mrs. Nobes suggested putting some more of the stuff in the gap with the caulk gun. Smart girl.

I will come back to that after I nail down all the electrical plans, which should be Thursday night. I talked to an electrician friend from church tonight and we are set to meet then to go over my plans.
From there I went on to putting poly on the ceiling pieces. They look good, and are ready for installation--I might have to do some final trimming, but that's easy.



I also went ahead and did a test of the Golden Oak stain on one of my door cutouts. You can see it on the table saw in those pics. I put poly on there as well to see how the exterior will likely look after glassing and clear coat. I am very pleased--and more importantly so is Mrs. Nobes. I gave all that a light sanding with 400 grit today, and they are all ready to go.
So tonight I moved on to getting the exterior ply finished with golden oak stain. I am joining 4 pieces with glass, so I picked out the pieces that look best together and laid them out on my big work table. I am joining factory edges, so all should just slide together and look great, right? Ha! Not so much. I can deal with small gaps, but these were too big. I went through various fixes in my head, and decided my best shot was Steve Frederick's method. When I first read this in his shop manual, I thought "Steve you have got to be kidding. Regular people can't do that." But lo and behold, this regular guy did it and it worked perfectly.
First you line the pieces up and leave a 3/8 gap between them. I clamped them to the table. I chucked a 1/2" bit in the router and set the depth to leave about 1/32 of material, so as to not dig a hole in my table. Clamping to the table was an adventure as well. One end had normal clamps, but the other end was 2' from the end of the table, so taking another arrow from the Steve Frederick quiver, I laid a piece of scrap over the edge of the work piece and the straight edge and screwed the scrap to the table. It worked.



Then I put a straight edge at the right distance from the cut, said "Boy don't screw this up," and went for it. I had thought through whether I had enough cord, where my feet would go as I cut through 8' of ply, and amazingly made an almost perfect cut. I took about 1/16 off each piece in a single pass, making perfectly matched pieces. The only problem was my bit wasn't deep enough. I adjusted the bit and did it again. Perfect cut again.



I trimmed off the 1/32 overhang with a utility knife and some very light sanding. When I slid everything together the parts matched perfectly as planned. I then did it all again for the 4' side. A little more light sanding on the surface, blow off dust with the compressor, tack cloth, and apply stain. I think they came out great.


Here's a close up of the alder ply with golden oak stain. I think this is going to be striking, assuming I don't screw up the glass.

Tomorrow it's the same steps on side 2, then golden oak on the roof pieces including the outer hatch skin on Thursday, then I have a 4-day weekend to hopefully really plow through a ton of items on the list.