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[email protected] April 15th 07 05:33 PM

Looking for a canoe design
 
I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?


Lew Hodgett April 15th 07 05:58 PM

Looking for a canoe design
 
wrote:
I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?


Buy another aluminum canoe.

Lew

[email protected] April 16th 07 12:23 AM

Looking for a canoe design
 
On Apr 15, 12:58 pm, Lew Hodgett wrote:
wrote:
I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?


Buy another aluminum canoe.

Lew


No, building is fun.


Jim Conlin April 16th 07 01:16 AM

Looking for a canoe design
 
Of the wooden canoe construction methods, it's hard to top cedar strip
composite for ruggedness. If it's to be painted and I could tolerate a
weight of 60 lbs. or a bit more, Beef up the glass on the outside of the
bottom to 10 or 12 oz. and paint it.

wrote in message
oups.com...
On Apr 15, 12:58 pm, Lew Hodgett wrote:
wrote:
I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?


Buy another aluminum canoe.

Lew


No, building is fun.




Mik April 16th 07 04:23 AM

Looking for a canoe design
 
I concur. Cedarstrip with fibreglass is tough as heck. And, if you are
painting it, you can save a lot of time by using staples during the
glue-up phase.

I have a Freedom 17, and strongly recommend it to anyone. Tracks well,
handles big swells beautifully. My advice is to build it using the
staple method, fibreglass it, and then finally, paint it when you
finally get the hull really beat up (in a number of years)

Stick with the 6oz cloth, but you could put a 2" strip down the keel
line for extra strength and durability.

Mike


Jim Conlin wrote:
Of the wooden canoe construction methods, it's hard to top cedar strip
composite for ruggedness. If it's to be painted and I could tolerate a
weight of 60 lbs. or a bit more, Beef up the glass on the outside of the
bottom to 10 or 12 oz. and paint it.

wrote in message
oups.com...

On Apr 15, 12:58 pm, Lew Hodgett wrote:

wrote:

I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?

Buy another aluminum canoe.

Lew


No, building is fun.





[email protected] April 16th 07 01:59 PM

Looking for a canoe design
 
On Apr 15, 11:23 pm, Mik wrote:
I concur. Cedarstrip with fibreglass is tough as heck. And, if you are
painting it, you can save a lot of time by using staples during the
glue-up phase.

I have a Freedom 17, and strongly recommend it to anyone. Tracks well,
handles big swells beautifully. My advice is to build it using the
staple method, fibreglass it, and then finally, paint it when you
finally get the hull really beat up (in a number of years)

Stick with the 6oz cloth, but you could put a 2" strip down the keel
line for extra strength and durability.

Mike

Jim Conlin wrote:
Of the wooden canoe construction methods, it's hard to top cedar strip
composite for ruggedness. If it's to be painted and I could tolerate a
weight of 60 lbs. or a bit more, Beef up the glass on the outside of the
bottom to 10 or 12 oz. and paint it.


wrote in message
roups.com...


On Apr 15, 12:58 pm, Lew Hodgett wrote:


wrote:


I am looking for a home built canoe design that is about 16' -17'
long. I do NOT want one of those "works of art" beautiful woodgrained
boats that you would be afraid to bang around on things. My boats get
hauled over oyster shells, banged on cypress knees, rammed into things
and generally abused. SO, I will paint it and probably expect to
repaint every two years or so. It should be a lake canoe for flat
water. I really like the old family 18' Grumman aluminum canoe but I
always have to go get it from whichever of my sisters currently has
it. So, something as indestructible would be nice. Suggestions?


Buy another aluminum canoe.


Lew


No, building is fun.


Via another thread, I found Clarkcraft and the Hartley 16 kayak. Now
I have never liked kayaks due to always having my legs scrunched up
under the deck so this looks like a good one cuz it has a more open
cockpit. Thoughts?


jim.isbell April 16th 07 02:58 PM

Looking for a canoe design
 
I saw a neat canoe made from a couple of pieces of plywood. Flat
bottomed. That could be upscaled to what you want. It was stitch and
clue. Looked like Sh***, but for rugged and cheap and easy it would
work fine.


Bill April 16th 07 06:35 PM

Looking for a canoe design
 
If you want outrigger for stability and even a sail you could look
he http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/garyd/

The T2 and the Wa'Apa are both made from plywood and painted. You
don't have to build allt he sail rigs and stuff if you just want to
paddle them.




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