On Sat, 23 Feb 2008 12:21:45 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote:
Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
One of my money earning hobbies is building dinghies. I designed and
built several 8 ft glass over plywood boats that will carry three
adults (well, skinny ones) quite safely in any weather I want to be
out in a dinghy. They aren't as light as a rubber duck but they are
light enough that I can pick one up by my self. Local made rubber
dinghies are running a bit over $1,000 here and I can build glass over
plywood boat for about a third of that.
Now that would be interesting.
Do you have any more info on them you can share?
I would't mind building my own.
(I suspect postage on something like that would be a bit over the top.)
But we would have to work out a way to swing it aboard first.
It is a scow and pretty wide, have a look at:
http://www.bateau.com/proddetail.php?prod=D5
which is what I used as a model when I designed mine.
The boat is built of 1/8" ply and glassed inside and out with the
lightest cloth I can get. The bow and stern seats are flotation
chambers. The center thwart is not boxed in like the D5 to save
weight, and I made the seat tops from 1/8" ply with a "honeycomb" made
from 3/4" wide strips of ply on the bottom side. This makes the seats
stiff enough to sit or stand on and they are still lighter then
thicker ply.
I have a "Y" shaped sling that attaches to the corners of the transom
and the bow and handle the dinghy with the spinnaker pole lift and use
a boat hook to push it out so it doesn't rub on the topsides.
I'm in Bangkok at the moment and the working drawings are in Phuket
but I can probably scare up the offsets somewhere and email them if
your address is any good.
Bruce-in-Bangkok
(Note:remove underscores
from address for reply)