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ahop
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.
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David Flew
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

You will need to provide much much more detail than this to get any
meaningful help - but my initial reaction is that 14 ft is likely to be a
little on the small side for a passenger confined to a wheel chair.

David



"ahop" wrote in message
om...
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.



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William R. Watt
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

ahop ) writes:
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.


Ottawa has a handicapped sailing school at the the Nepean Sailing Club.
I'm sure there must be handicapped kayaking, hard not to with so much
publicity and marketing around kayaks. (Would not be surprized to hear of
some group promoting kayaking as a means of bringing about world peace.)
I'd try searching the Internet for hadicapped boating. You might get some
info or a contact at www.nsc.ca (Nepean Sailing Club).

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P.C.
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

Hi

"ahop" skrev i en meddelelse
om...
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.


As another reply point out, 14 feet is a very small boat to acturly rebuild
..
*you could consider to ask designers if this subject is somthing somone have
a suggestion about as the best option would be a bpat designed for the
special needs. --------- A lot of free plans is around, and maby some
designer have some clever idear to solve the problems. Guess you need a
method fit for one-off's
P.C.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Cyber-Boat/


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Steve
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

Regardless of the boat size, I would recommend additional floatation on the
wheel chair if the person is belted in.. A personal life jacket wouldn't be
enough to support the wheel chair as well. Even if the person isn't belted
in, the floatation could save the wheel chair from being lost, seperate from
the person.

I agree with others that a 14' boat might be too small for the person in a
wheel chair. The boat thwarts would create a problem possition the chair.

You might consider taking this person, just as a passenger and rig one seat
that will properly support him/her. Leave the wheel chair on the dock or
back in the car.

Any one who has assisted a handicaped person in and out of a bath should
know how to do this well enough to work out a system for getting in and out
of a boat.

At my marina there is a an old 'tug' like boat, about 25 ft that used a
wheel chair ramp to get the owner onboard, however the slip fingers aren't
wide enough for the ramp so the crew motors the boat to another wide
visitors dock so they can use the ramp.

Steve
s/v Good Intentions


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Garland Gray II
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

14 feet does seem small...unless it was maybe a Hobie 14 catamaran.

"ahop" wrote in message
om...
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.



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beachnut
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

I would go for a larger bass boat since it is wide and relatively
stable, and eliminate
the wheelchair, and replace it with a special seat on a slide,
two rails on the length of the boat, so the height would
be low and the center of gravity therefore low.
.. The seat could spin around,
you could get anywhere on the boat. If you had dock
access you could put in a swing-out crane so someone
could drive up in his handicapped converted vehicle,
operate the crane, lift himself out of the wheelchair on the
dock, get into the boat and take off..

"ahop" wrote in message
om...
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.



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Brian Whatcott
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

This seems like the sensible, safe way to go.
I would be uncomfortable with a wheelchair passenger
in my low freeboard 18 ft bass boat, far less so in my 15 ft sail boat
hull.

On the other hand, my big old i/o work boat at 20 feet and 3 ft of
free board, with a clear deck would handle a wheel chair
safely.

Brian W

On Tue, 30 Mar 2004 08:05:58 -0500, "beachnut"
wrote:

I would go for a larger bass boat since it is wide and relatively
stable, and eliminate
the wheelchair, and replace it with a special seat on a slide,
two rails on the length of the boat, so the height would
be low and the center of gravity therefore low.
. The seat could spin around,
you could get anywhere on the boat. If you had dock
access you could put in a swing-out crane so someone
could drive up in his handicapped converted vehicle,
operate the crane, lift himself out of the wheelchair on the
dock, get into the boat and take off..

"ahop" wrote in message
. com...
Can anyone tell me how I would go about converting a small 14 foot
boat for a wheelchair passenger - and is there any companies in the uk
that specialise in this.



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William R. Watt
 
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Default Converting boat for wheelchair access

I don't think 14 ft is to short. I have in front of me a study plan for 15
ft centre console plywood fishing boat (Good Enough 15 from Scott Sprague,
Paulsbo WA, USA) with a small cabin enclosing the console which could
accomodate a wheel chair. My cousin has been a parapalegic ever since a
car crash at the age of 16 and has a boat and cottage. The boat is the
same sort of V-bow flat run centre console planing skiff. I've only seen
photos of the cousin's boat. That boat's probably 18 ft. It has to have
the volume and freeboard to handle the large waves on the big shallow lake
at his cottage.


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