On Tue, 02 Aug 2005 12:00:57 -0700, raoul  wrote: 
 
In article , P.C. Ford 
 wrote: 
 
 On Sat, 30 Jul 2005 16:15:05 GMT, "Jack"  wrote: 
 
 Hello all, 
 (This has probably been answered before ) 
 My wife has this crazy idea that she wants me to restore an old Chris Craft 
 Riviera.  She saw one on a local lake, and fell in love with it.  She thinks 
 that since I am a decent carpenter, its only natural that I could restore a 
 boat, right ?? (oh my god, what am i writing!!) 
 I have no idea where to start.  Have you seen first timers restore these 
 boats?  If I find one to restore, what should would be something you look 
 for to not buy the project boat. (like missing bottom, etc, engine really 
 bad, etc.)  We might just buy one, but I would like to give a restoration a 
 shot.  I have already done cars, so I know that restoration work is tough. 
 Thanks for your time. Sorry for the long post. 
  
 I have restored antique speedboats for 30 years. Two things. 
 
 1. Get an expert, a real expert not just someone that thinks he is a 
 an expert, to examine the boat carefully. Be sure you are restoring a 
 boat that will reward your efforts in the best measure possible. 
 
 2. Look for Dan Danenberg book on runabout restauration. I don't 
 believe everything he says but it's a great start. 
 
I agree on those two points but would add one other: 
 
3. Consider building one yourself from scratch. There are designs for 
wooden runabouts which are attractive and designed for the home 
carpenter. Glen-L ( www,glenl.com) has four or five different models of 
the type you are speaking of that have been built many, many times by 
guys in their garage. They have full materials lists and packages for 
fasteners, coverings and hardware so you could figure within 10% or so 
what it might cost for you to build. You could follow the instructions 
step by step until it is finished. Restoring something means that, for 
the most part, you have to 'write your own instructions' as it were in 
order to get it done. 
 
So, if it would take a real Chris-Craft to make you happy, go for it. 
Plug away at it and eventually you will get it done. However, if I were 
doing it, based on other boat projects i've done and helped on, I'd 
start from scratch and go from keel to deck with new materials and a 
design that other guys like me managed to get finished. 
 
Building from scratch is certainly a pleasure.  However, the typical 
home built boat does not have much of a resale value. If selling the 
boat is in any way possible (and most boats are eventually sold) you 
should note this. 
 
Glenn-L boats in my opinion would have a particulary low value. One 
would be better served to build a more complicate boat. 
 
Hint: plywood is not fun to work with and does not produce a long 
lasting boat. Stick with real wood. 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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