“This boat is the most versatile in all weather conditions, and it’s reliability is unmatched,” said Gruver, who graduated from Penn College with a forestry degree in 1997. “The boat has responded to calls throughout central Pennsylvania. We are part of a water rescue taskforce that is dispatched countywide. The boat has been all over Lycoming County, from numerous high stream and river rescues to saving individuals from their flooding homes.”
With mounting wear and tear after decades of service and the nonprofit group facing prohibitive repair costs, Greg Gruver’s cousin and fellow volunteer, Michael Gruver, a 1994 Penn College graduate (broadcast communications), sought his alma mater’s assistance. Michael Gruver is friends with Craig A. Miller, assistant professor and department head of engineering design technology, and knew that Miller produced blueprints for the steel globe that Penn College welding students fabricated last year for the Little League Baseball World Series complex in South Williamsport.
“I asked Craig if he thought Penn College would be interested in helping out another local nonprofit with some welding work,” Michael Gruver said. “Craig thought it would be a great real-world project for the students and spoke with Mike Allen, and Mike was glad to take this project on.”
The repairs included replacing the boat’s deteriorated wooden floor with aluminum, repairing cracks in the frame of the 18-foot-long trailer, installing aluminum step plates on the side of the trailer and trading mild steel light mounts for aluminum ones.
“This was a good project for the students to work on because it gave them a chance to use multiple pieces of equipment in the fabrication and automation areas of our 55,000-plus-square-foot welding facility,” Allen said. “They used the CNC plasma cutting table to cut out the boat’s new aluminum floor plates. They also had the opportunity to rivet, rather than weld, the pieces together, and some of the students had never done that before. Installing the floor plates was the most challenging part because some were not square pieces.”
The students employed a press brake to bend the metal.
“Getting the right curvature for the aluminum bottom was the most challenging,” said Andrew Anastasi, of Mount Tabor, New Jersey. “There was more to it than a typical assignment.”