Dino,
I am hoping to have a professional do it for about $600 US or $1,000 Cdn.
Yeah, I thought that sounded about right, too, BEFORE I did the job. I
charged $1000(US), minus $600 for materials, divided by 314 hours - I made
$1.27 per hour on that job. Hope your 'professional' doesn't see this.
I'd rather be paddling than puddering.
That's why it was my last restoration.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tem=3617885338
Nice detail!! I suspect even my profession builder will no be doing that
kind of work!
It's interesting that in modern useage 'professional' craftsmanship is
generally considered to be superior to 'amature' - yet only amatures can
afford to put the time into a project that results in wages of $1.27 per
hour. I am astounded to pay $40-60-80 per hour shop rates to have a
'professional' repair my lawn mower, plumbing, or automobile. I wonder what
professional boat builders, who have equivalent skills and similar
investment in tools make?
If I had charged $40 per hour to restore the Old Town, the bottom line would
have been $13,160 (including materials at cost - most places add some profit
margins to their parts). I guess I should think about going pro.
--
Gary Wright
Springfield, MO
_________________________________
In article , "Dino &/or
Susan" wrote:
The Right Thing To Do.
Hard to argue.
My first (and last!) canvas restoration required 314 hours of my time (the
sponsons added some complexity over a normal job). I spent about $600 on
materials, including new decks, stems, 9 ribs, and 10 half ribs purchased
from Old Town.
I am hoping to have a professional do it for about $600 US or $1,000 Cdn.
I'd rather be paddling than puddering.
To see a cedar strip canoe I built, you can look at the pictures on my
auction at:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tem=3617885338
Nice detail!! I suspect even my profession builder will no be doing that
kind of work!
Regards.
Dino