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![]() "Backyard Renegade" wrote in message om... "GAZ" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of building a small (2 person) sized drift boat for use on westside Olympic peninsula rivers in Washington state. Needs to be light and strong. Any recommendations? Thanks Gordon When you say a small 2 person you leave things open a little. With boats shaped like that (banannas) you need to keep the length and beam. These driftboats are not really "small" boats. If you try to scale one down you end up with a boat similar to Paysons cartopper (only with flat bottom) that is really best suited for one person to sit in the middle of the boat. Once you add extra people to the bow or stern in a small boat with this much rocker, you put a lot of weight above the center of balance and the boat becomes a real tricky boat to handle and especially to move around in. So if you build a drift boat, make sure you keep it at least 14 feet or preferably larger. If you need a smaller boat, a driftboat, as beautiful as they are, may not be the right tool. Disclaimer. I have plans for several driftboats including a set from Roger at Rivers touch, but I have not actually built one. I have however built close to 50 boats under 12 feet and do know a little of how they react in the water so take my advice for what you paid for it, if I am way off base here I will take my flames like a man, Scotty from SmallBoats.com Sounds reasonable to me! Gordon |
#2
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Look at the 14" boat on the following page.
http://www.montanaboatbuilders.com/Freestone.htm I don't know if Jason offers plans for the 14 footer but it shouldn't be that hard to adapt the 15 footer's plans. |
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