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#1
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
Hello,
I have recently found an old (1960's?) Penn Yan boat, I think about 21 ft. Under the false floor I can see that the ribs are rotting as there is 1/2" of standing water in the boat. It looks to me like the work to restore this and actually float it would be endless, though it is a real beauty. I've done some rough carpentry before, but never anything of this magnitude, and would not know where to start. I would like to know where I might get some comprehensive expertise on what this sort of restoration would entail, including the replacement of ribs and cedar stripping, and other possible alternatives for making the hull sound. I haven't bought the boat yet and am now leaning toward walking away, as the work seems pretty overwhelming. Thanks for any and all suggestions. Floydo. |
#2
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
Well, first you have to do a refurbish versus building a new one value
analysis. If you never own and did repair maintenance on a wooden boat you better to walk away from it. On repairing a wooden boat you do not use a square of level. Many time you have to eyeball a piece to make a duplicate and to fit it. Replacing a few ribs and plank is not all that bad. But if you have to do more than that you will require lots of time and cash. Oak and other wood species are not cheap. You may want to use green wood and dry it. Before you do any work you have to wait until the wood is dry. Conversely if you are doing it for a relaxing therapy you may enjoy every minute of it. If you are doing it to safe money you may or may not reach your goal. Once you are finish refurbishing the boat every year you have to maintain it with about 25 hours of work or more. "floydo" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, I have recently found an old (1960's?) Penn Yan boat, I think about 21 ft. Under the false floor I can see that the ribs are rotting as there is 1/2" of standing water in the boat. It looks to me like the work to restore this and actually float it would be endless, though it is a real beauty. I've done some rough carpentry before, but never anything of this magnitude, and would not know where to start. I would like to know where I might get some comprehensive expertise on what this sort of restoration would entail, including the replacement of ribs and cedar stripping, and other possible alternatives for making the hull sound. I haven't bought the boat yet and am now leaning toward walking away, as the work seems pretty overwhelming. Thanks for any and all suggestions. Floydo. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
Hi,
Thanks for the reply. I have also noticed that, because the boat has been sitting on its trailer for so long, that it is actually settling on it, to the degree that the keel has a dent or slight curvature where it is resting on the front trailer roller, and the hull near the stern is also bowing from the weight on the rollers. How scary is that ?(!) |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
floydo wrote:
I haven't bought the boat yet and am now leaning toward walking away, as the work seems pretty overwhelming. RUN, don't walk away. I won't bore you with the details. Lew |
#5
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
Hehhehhehheh!
Much appreciated, and I think you are right, though it is such a pretty sight, sitting there in the cow pasture... |
#6
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
If you are still looking at it you aren't running fast enough. Run for your
life and wallet because if you stay longer you won't have either, the boat will. Brian |
#7
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
I agree, run! Rot you can see is bad, what you can't see is worse.
If you're in the PNW, I know of a good wood project with Volvo motor and outdrive for little money. G "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message link.net... floydo wrote: I haven't bought the boat yet and am now leaning toward walking away, as the work seems pretty overwhelming. RUN, don't walk away. I won't bore you with the details. Lew |
#8
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
"floydo" wrote in message oups.com... Hehhehhehheh! Much appreciated, and I think you are right, though it is such a pretty sight, sitting there in the cow pasture... There is an old Greek saying- "If you have a friend who has become an enemy...buy him a wooden boat" Having been there, I agree that the answer is RUN, AS FAST AS YOU CAN. Peter HK |
#9
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
floydo wrote:
Hi, Thanks for the reply. I have also noticed that, because the boat has been sitting on its trailer for so long, that it is actually settling on it, to the degree that the keel has a dent or slight curvature where it is resting on the front trailer roller, and the hull near the stern is also bowing from the weight on the rollers. How scary is that ?(!) A hogged boat such as that can provide you with endless hours of amusement for many years trying to fix it. At the same time it will provide an outlet for all your surplus money. Even money that isn't surplus. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
#10
posted to rec.boats.building
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hesitant buyer of wooden boat
The materials costs of fixing such boats may not be enormous, but it can be
lots of hours. Unless you have, or have ready access to, the very fussy skills needed to restore it, you don't want to be anywhere near that boat. A less than correct repair job will not add value. "floydo" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, I have recently found an old (1960's?) Penn Yan boat, I think about 21 ft. Under the false floor I can see that the ribs are rotting as there is 1/2" of standing water in the boat. It looks to me like the work to restore this and actually float it would be endless, though it is a real beauty. I've done some rough carpentry before, but never anything of this magnitude, and would not know where to start. I would like to know where I might get some comprehensive expertise on what this sort of restoration would entail, including the replacement of ribs and cedar stripping, and other possible alternatives for making the hull sound. I haven't bought the boat yet and am now leaning toward walking away, as the work seems pretty overwhelming. Thanks for any and all suggestions. Floydo. |
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