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mac
 
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In article ,
Jonathan Wye wrote:

Some older ones may
have absorbed water in between their two hulls, but that can be dealt
with by hanging them from a tree for a year or two, with a couple of
points allowing the water to drain slowly out, generally.


hope your neighbors have a sense of humor and appreciate "yard art".
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imagineero
 
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Default How to Choose the Right Used Boat to Fix It Up?

I've had quite a bit of experience working on boats, some for my main
occupation which is as a welder/fabricator and some just on my own or
friends boats. Steel hulls can be good and lets face it; welding steel
is not a difficult skill with a little practice. Im not telling you to
weld up your own hull and go sail the world, but most people with a 3
month part time course or a couple of weeks very intensive training can
learn almost all they'd need to know to operate an oxy torch, a mig
welder (or stick if you dont mind rolling the hull over) and some basic
forming skills. I've worked on steel hulls from 25' to 10,000 tonnes
with hull thicknesses from 1/4" to 1". With the right tools and enough
time you can do as good a job as any manufacturer. Make sure you've
got it right before you trust your life to it though.

Aluminum is a bit trickier, but its mostly more of a tool game. Dents
can be fixed with something as simple as two hammers. Forming is not
hard but you'll need a couple of dollys and to learn how to anneal.
Most aluminum work hardens. Cracks/splits are another story, and leaks
can often be mended with some silicone. If you've got lots of time and
little money and are somewhere close to america, buy an oxy/acetylene
rig (under $300) and then get one of these miracle gas welding torches
like the meco midget, see here;

http://www.tinmantech.com/html/meco_midget_torch.html

these are used for super high tech fabrication of airplanes, F1 race
cars, high end motorcycles and bicycles. The guys at the above webpage
have excellent demo days, materials and videos. Expect to spend 6
months+ learning this very valuable and highly sought after skill. You
will be very popular if you can master it.

If you have lots of money and little time then MIG aluminum is more for
you. I've done plenty of aluminum work with boats, and at the harder
end the latest high tech tip trailers for big trucks. Dont settle for
anything less than a push/pull system (small motor pulling the wire
that is contained in the gun). Expect to pay somewhere in the vicinity
of $20,000 for the latest fronius or kempi welders that will have you
welding aluminum to survey standard within an afternoon. Anything less
(like even $5,000) just will not cut the mustard. I've tried most of
the stuff on the market. Forget anything that costs less than $1000,
or any welder that claimes to be adabtable to aluminum; you're wasting
your time and money. If you dont have the money to get into this game
then call around to find out who is making aluminum truck bodies and
turn up any day of the week except Friday near their closing time with
a case of beer and your boat. They will have _plenty_ of scrap in the
bin.

My personal experience with fibreglass seems to be the same as others
who have already posted. In the early days, folk who were making boats
out of the stuff seemed hesitant, and they used the same thickness of
solid fibreglass as they had been using for wood before then! None of
these boats were speed demons, but they were _solid_ and many are still
doing circumnavigations. After these first boats didnt sink they got
comfortable and started experimenting with different ideas.... these
middle boats are hit and miss and you really need to dig, talk to
owners of the same boat, find out the companies history, talk to the
guys running the company if its still in operation. They are very
helpful if they're still around and have memories that will amaze you.
With newer boats they seem to have got it right with hull thickness and
composites/sandwhiches.

Cant speak for wood except to say whenever i see a wooden boat i want
one but im scared at the same time. There are some very handsome
wooden boats out there, and it strikes me as more a craft than
fibreglass though i cant say why. I cant help but rub my hands over
the hull, and then knock on it. This is something i've seen people who
have never sailed in their life do, so it must be in our basic D.N.A or
something ;-) The sound tells a lot.

Shaun

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Default How to Choose the Right Used Boat to Fix It Up?

Thanks for sharing your experience in various ways of boat building.

Steel hulls can be good and lets face it...
Aluminum is a bit trickier, but its mostly more of a tool game...


The fact that you have many years of experience with steel and aluminum
construction, I can understand that you think using steel and aluminum
is quite doable. But I must say that I am even more convinced not to
get involved with repairing a steel / aluminum boat after I have read
your post. The learning curve and upfront investment seems to be a bit
too high for me. This probably explains the reason why people tend to
recommend us to ask metal worker to fix aluminum boats instead of
trying to do it ourselves. If I end up having an aluminum boat that
need fixing, I would definitely sent it to a repair shop that knows how
to deal with aluminum.

In the early days, folk who were making boats
out of the stuff seemed hesitant, and they used
the same thickness of solid fibreglass as they
had been using for wood before then! ... After
these first boats didnt sink they got comfortable
and started experimenting with different ideas....
these middle boats are hit and miss and you really
need to dig, ... With newer boats they seem to
have got it right with hull thickness and
composites/sandwhiches.


Thanks for pointing out the three different periods of fiberglass
boats. Seem like I should stick with either very old fiberglass boat,
or very recent fiberglass boat. For my budget, I probably should
concentrate on very old fiberglass boat (speed doesn't matter to me).
According to other people, I probably should focus on boat that are
before the first oil crisis, and that will be before 1973. Between
checking the age of the boat and knocking at the hull to check its
condition, I am hoping that I can find a good solid fiberboat that
needs some fixing and doesn't cost a lot of money (I need to save some
money to buy a brand new gas engine).

Cant speak for wood except to say whenever i see a wooden boat i want
one but im scared at the same time. ...


I thought about building a wooden boat with fiberglass reinforcement
after watching boat building TV shows. But fixing a used boat seems to
be a cheaper and faster alternative than building a new one. And I have
an impression that fixing an old wooden boat is not really a good idea
(the whole hull may have to be replaced). Therefore, I will have to
skip wooden boat, and concentrate my search on either aluminum or
fiberglass boats.

Jay Chan

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DSK
 
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Default How to Choose the Right Used Boat to Fix It Up?

... But I must say that I am even more convinced not to
get involved with repairing a steel / aluminum boat after I have read
your post. The learning curve and upfront investment seems to be a bit
too high for me.


Investment, maybe not. You can get a steel boat for a song, and aluminum
for not much more.

If you're already a skilled welder, then it makes sense. A few years
ago, seeing a number of aluminum boats on the market, of a type that I
liked a lot, at a good price, I looked into learning to weld aluminum...
unfortunately aluminum is the trickiest stuff to work, not practical as
a handyman project. But it's great engineering material, boats made of
it can be light & strong & durable.



In the early days, folk who were making boats
out of the stuff seemed hesitant, and they used
the same thickness of solid fibreglass as they
had been using for wood before then! ... After
these first boats didnt sink they got comfortable
and started experimenting with different ideas.


Excuse me, but this is a total myth. The idea that "early fiberglass
boatbuilders didn't know how strong it was" is incorrect.

In the 1940s and 1950s, the U.S. Navy began building small utility craft
out of fiberglass and commissioned exhaustive studies of the material.
Many of the early boatbuilders worked on those projects and knew as much
about it as any designer/builder does nowadays.


... With newer boats they seem to
have got it right with hull thickness and
composites/sandwhiches.



Fiberglass *is* a composite. With regard to cored construction, that has
always been an issue firstly of build quality, as laminating cores takes
careful attention (ie skilled labor) whereas chopper gun or even "hand
lay up" is much less demanding. So choice of materials & care in
building produced excellent cored structures even in the middle 1960s.
The 2nd part of that equation is care & maintenance. If the owner never
bothered to rebed the deck fittings & let water seep into the core, then
it gets screwed up.

BTW for anybody who doesn't think that cored fiberglass hulls don't
last, the first balsa-cored sailboat 'Red Jacket' is still sailing and
still sound.


wrote:
Thanks for pointing out the three different periods of fiberglass
boats. Seem like I should stick with either very old fiberglass boat,
or very recent fiberglass boat.


Well, you should start out by doing some field work. Join a crew and do
a lot of sailing. Trudge around to the sailing clubs and work at getting
rides on as many different boats as you can. Keep a notebook to record
your impressions of the different boats.



According to other people, I probably should focus on boat that are
before the first oil crisis, and that will be before 1973.


Well, there is a slight amount of truth to that, mostly due to speed of
production as much as anything else. But a lot of those old very thick
hulled boats are mostly resin, which is brittle. Heavy ain't necessarily
strong, despite the numerous old wives tales about the strength of 2" or
6" or whatever thick fiberglass in the old pre-Nixon boats. A lot of
what's said around the docks on this subject is old wives tales and
utter nonsense.


... I am hoping that I can find a good solid fiberboat that
needs some fixing and doesn't cost a lot of money


Be darn sure you don't under estimate the cost of fixing. Spend some
time with the various marine catalogs and price things like running
rigging, wiring, marine paints, etc etc.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

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unfortunately aluminum is the trickiest stuff to work,
not practical as a handyman project. But it's great
engineering material, boats made of it can be light
& strong & durable.


Yes, you are right. This is the reason why I would ask repair shop to
fix the boat if I get an aluminum boat that needs fixing.

Well, you should start out by doing some field work. Join a crew and do
a lot of sailing. Trudge around to the sailing clubs and work at getting
rides on as many different boats as you can. Keep a notebook to record
your impressions of the different boats.


I am looking for a small powered boat for fishing. I think I know what
I need: A 17-ft/18-ft small center console that is made in aluminum or
fiberglass. I have been using rental boats for years. I need a boat for
myself that I can rig it to the way that I want.

Well, there is a slight amount of truth to that, mostly due to speed of
production as much as anything else. But a lot of those old very thick
hulled boats are mostly resin, which is brittle. Heavy ain't necessarily
strong, despite the numerous old wives tales about the strength of 2" or
6" or whatever thick fiberglass in the old pre-Nixon boats. A lot of
what's said around the docks on this subject is old wives tales and
utter nonsense.


In other words, I am better off examining the boat itself instead of
worrying about too much of its production year: Knocking around the
hull to see how much repair work that the boat will need ... etc. And I
need to keep an open mind with used boats, and don't be too quick in
eliminating a boat just because it was old or it was built in certain
years.

Sound like a workable plan to me. Thanks.

Be darn sure you don't under estimate the cost of fixing. Spend some
time with the various marine catalogs and price things like running
rigging, wiring, marine paints, etc etc.


Yes, I have been reading mail order catalogs to see how much new
fittings will cost. I will revisit some boat yards soon to see whether
they carry fittings that come off from old boat. Hopefully, old
fittings cost less than the new ones.

Jay Chan



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Default How to Choose the Right Used Boat to Fix It Up?

One piece of generic advice... types/brands boats seem
to build reputations in sort of the same way sports
teams do... ie parallel tracks, one having to do with
reality and the other arising entirely from wishful
thinking on the part of the fans. Everyone will love to
tell you how great their boat is... this is a good
source of info about that type of boat as long as you
can seperate out the two types of info. Holds true for
fishing boats as well as sail boats.


Thanks for the advice. Honestly, for my limited budget, my choice of
used boats are quite limited. I don't think I can be choosy about which
brand to choose.

Jay Chan

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