On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 07:18:37 +0700, Bruce wrote:
On Wed, 22 Jun 2011 01:04:46 +0000 (UTC), scp wrote:
On Tue, 21 Jun 2011 17:50:18 -0700, Bob La Londe wrote:
"Bob La Londe" wrote in message
...
"scp" wrote in message
...
What would be the lightest but easy to build row boat design for car
topping and fishing?
Stitch & glue garvey in 1/4" plywood w/ 1/2" seats. Hands down.
Bateau and Glen-L both have some small designs that would be
suitable. For this size I might favor some of the small Bateau
designs. Make the hull. Put seats in to make it rigid. Done. You
could probably throw it together doing a crappy job in a couple days
or do a decent job in a week. Paint it when you are done to keep the
epoxy from degrading in the sunlight.
You mixed your styles though. A good boat for rowing is not
necessarily the best fishing platform. Small water fishing platform
will be wider and a flat or flatter bottom.
Something like this might make a fair compromise.
http://www.bateau.com/proddetail.php?prod=FL12
I would probably favor something more like this myself.
http://www.bateau.com/proddetail.php?prod=GV11&cat=9
Thank you.
How about the smallest jonboat?
Can it be rowed?
I'll be moving around just several hundred yards in calm water.
If you want "small" you might look at a D-4 dinghy. Free plans from
http://www.bateau.com/freeplans.php
About 7'10" long they were originally designed as a yacht tender they
can be built from 2 or 3 sheets of ply and can carry two adults, are
reasonably stable and can be propelled by rowing, paddling or a 1.5 HP
outboard.
Cheers,
Bruce
Thank you.
It's in the short list.
I want it as light as possible
but steady enough to fish from.
Any fabric on frame options?