 Let's see what goes right about through there. Yeah, a little bit more. There's my set for the other one. I think that might be enough for this. Okay, I think that might be enough screws, too. Dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun. Good, good, good, good. Good, good. Oh, yeah. I did put glue in there, too, so. Maybe I should let that dry before I, oh, no, but I gotta get some screws in through here and down there. Yeah, I wanna do that before the glue dries to close this seam at the bottom. All right. You know, when I did this yesterday, I was mostly just concerned about getting the plywood to even do what I was asking it to do. Now that it's done it, I'm starting to get a little more particular about the shape and I think I wanna move everything forward so that there's more of a flat area back here because when someone sits in it, their butt's gonna be about here and I would like their butt to be on a flatter spot. Plus, it'll add more stability. Like the farther this stays at the shallow angle and I'm pretty sure at this point that the plywood can handle it. If I move all the pieces up a little bit and then maybe take this last piece, well, I don't wanna take it out. Let me just make another one of those and put it maybe here-ish to keep that same flat-ish part. I don't wanna push it too far. I don't wanna make the thing crack. I don't know. You know, this is a pretty awesome shape. Let me just, I wonder if I could kill two birds with one stone. Okay, one of the problems with doing a boat like this is that the bottom ends up curving and at this end, it's curving slightly up. I don't really want it to curve up a little bit. I'd like it to be straight to go right into the other piece. So to get it to line up with the other piece, I have to like push it down and bend it a little and you know what, when I do that, it forces the middle up and actually flattens that out a little bit, which is what I was wanting to do anyway. So maybe if I do that, that'll be enough. Yeah, maybe I'll do that. So I need to get a piece in here that matches this. When I'm pushing this down, I might even wanna pull this in a little bit more. And then, you know what? At the end, when I'm doing the sanding and everything, I can always take off a little bit under here, kind of flatten it out a little. You know, kind of, yeah, I think if I do that actually. All right, side number two, let's do it. I've even got all these things already cut, which is great. Doing pretty much the same thing I did on the first one, except on this one, I've got two braces back here, just to extend the flattened out part a little further. So maybe this will be the half where the person puts their butt, then their FICO the other way. Anyway, it won't be much different. And it'll be, okay, great. Ugh, now what? All right, then, how do I know if it's straight? Good, right there. Don't move! You know what, if I was gonna do this again, I would leave some space on the ends of the plywood so that I could put a piece in there and screw it under it. But I didn't, I'm not gonna undo it. Okay, now the more I tighten those screws, the more it pulls up on the ends of the kayak, collapses that space under. Now, I don't want that space under. However, I also don't want the kayaks to go up too much. So let me see how much of that space I get rid of before I think the kayaks are going up too much. Actually, I think they're pretty much where I want them right now. Okay, now to cut out some next pieces. When I made the paper models, the curve that went here was something I made up and then when I attached it to this piece, it defined the angle in there. But the angle in there is already defined because I've got those things screwed in and glued in. So that means this angle here, this curve here is already defined too. So I have to draw the parts from this. All right, and the sidewall pieces, I don't want them vertical. I want them to come out a little bit. So maybe I'll use some leftover ones of these. Yeah, it's probably a pretty good angle. Yeah, I think it's too much. Yeah, I think I'll just go with that. Put it on there, just draw the line right there. This piece here is the leftover from when I cut these and I can almost use it, but it's not tall enough. So I don't have to get a piece of, ah, anyway. I'll draw the curve on here just to get the curve. And then I'm gonna check the other side to compare because they should be the same. And if they're not the same, I'll take the average between the two curves and that will be the curve. And that should force these to be the same. There's my line right there. Goes, phew, it goes, it's like a rid of an ass. I'll get this pencil out of my mouth. If I flip it over, I don't know how well it's showing up on the camera, but it looks like it's pretty much the same curve. I'll have to do some measurements to check. Okay, let's see how I did here. Oh, wait a minute. Check the side, I actually cut stupid, all right. Oh, that looks good. Many lost, fits both sides. Yup, looks good to me. And I didn't get this to go all the way up to the front because I don't think it needs to. I don't want a flat part on the top of here. I want a curve. I don't know what curve, but some kind of curve. All right, I just bent my ruler and made some curve. Another thing up here, I don't know, it starts getting pretty thin up there. This half looks pretty good. Man, that is not bad. Oh, wow, that's a nice mess we got there. Now I'm just trying to get enough of these pieces on top here so that when I put the top plywood on, that's something, that's somewhere to rest. I guess I should put one at each end. That should be enough. When I made these with the cardboard, I needed slightly more than two sheets. However, when I started putting together the life-size one, I got a better idea of how tall these walls had to be. And they didn't have to be as tall as I made them with the cardboard, which means I may actually have enough. This fits. Oh, nice. Totally have enough. Oh, that's awesome. Oh, that's close. I have no space to spare there. And I even have an extra piece left over. This, man, this is awesome. All right, let's have to put some weights on here and draw the line with the other one of these over there. I guarantee someone's gonna ask me this question. Why is this piece flat across instead of being like, like V'd up or A-framed or rounded? Well, there's a really nice feature of having a flat, at least going across this way. I don't want it flat that way. I want it to bow down and come back up. That's where it's gonna get its strength from because it's gonna be under tension that way it'll keep its shape. But I want it flat across so that if you put two of these side by side and lay something on top, your kayaks will be stable. So if you're ever kayaking out kayaking with a friend, you each have your kayak. So you want to jump out and go swimming. You can take your paddles, lay them across the two kayaks and then it's super easy to get back in to your respective kayaks. Isn't that great? And you could even, which I'm sure I will do, attach something to the top of one kayak that attaches to the other kayak and make like a little catamaran. It's just a really nice thing to have because a lot of times I've been kayaking, I shouldn't say a lot of times, but like I've been kayaking with friends in the standard store-bought kayaks. And there's always some point where we're like, you know, it would be really nice if we could just lay something across these and turn it into a little catamaran. Even just temporarily while we're snorkeling and we want to get in and out, we just want our kayaks to be stable. Or even you can kayak them together, you know, actually have something that attaches here. And I'm thinking I may, yeah, I mean, I'm definitely gonna make some kind of attachments here so that you can put a like aluminum aluminum pole cross or something like that. And then you can even put a sail up in the middle. How sweet is that? Anyway, okay, let's get this sucker in here. Oh, I'm so excited. This looks so good. Ah, I just gotta show you. Oh, look at, ah, man. Probably doesn't even come out as good on the camera. I'm gonna have a lot of spackling to do, obviously, like all these seams, but you know, all these surfaces are nice and smooth. Won't have to do anything to them. And the shape, right now I'm just trying to get the excellent shape and I am super happy with the shape. Okay, let's get this. Now I wanna wood filler every seam on the inside. Wood filler being sawdust, which I've got plenty of in glue. And this here, good, isn't that? Don't stick to me, stick to that. Okay, I'm gonna get a lot of material up in the front here. I'm not sure how much I'm gonna sand this off when I do the outside. All wood filler and spacklerized in. That's spectacular. Ooh, next I get to put the tops on. Although I better wait for the glue to dry. Okay, it is cool.