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#1
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
Anybody know of any plans preferably stitch and glue, for a small
13-15 foot sport boat with a similar shape or performance as the 13 foot sport whalers, trihull design? Or any other suggestions for small, light open fishing boat, preferably not a pointy hull or single V, but not flat bottomed either, that would fish one person, and fly with a 25 horse? Thanks in advance for your suggestions. NOTE: I have a lot of experience with resin and cloth/glass and good wood working capabilities/shop and have done stitch and tape too, so I can take on a more difficult build without much problem. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On Jun 3, 1:08 pm, KD6EVM wrote:
wrote: Anybody know of any plans preferably stitch and glue, for a small 13-15 foot sport boat with a similar shape or performance as the 13 foot sport whalers, trihull design? Or any other suggestions for small, light open fishing boat, preferably not a pointy hull or single V, but not flat bottomed either, that would fish one person, and fly with a 25 horse? Thanks in advance for your suggestions. NOTE: I have a lot of experience with resin and cloth/glass and good wood working capabilities/shop and have done stitch and tape too, so I can take on a more difficult build without much problem. You're asking for a lot. The whaler hull is pretty complex. You might want to check out the Diablo or Diablo Grande: http://www.instantboats.com/diablog.htm If you have done stitch and tape you are probably already familiar with the Payson boats. IMO, performance is not the whaler's strong suit but rather safety and stability derived from whaler's sandwiched foam core construction. There may be some buildable designs basrd on the Livingston hulls that would meet your needs. If anyone knows of a Livingston tack and tape knock-off I would be interested in seeing it. Tom Yes, very familiar with Payson and the skiffs, however that is not the right boat for the job. I need a fast, shallow boat that can be powered easily or rowed for steerage in slow current. We would use this boat for single handed fishing in skinny water or at times to get out and play on the lake, aaaaaaand, it also needs to be useful as a crabbing skiff which I think it will. I have designed a whaler type hull of panels. It is 13 feet long and 5 feet wide. It should handle a good size motor for speed between fishing grounds, and still can be rowed around in the low water in crabbing season. Our origional crabbing skiff was Paysons skimmer, still a very fun boat but a little small for general fun. A 12 foot version would be ideal so I decided to go 13 and add a tri hull and some pleasing lines. I may start this week, I am very excited looking at the lines I have developed (borrowed from pics of many Whalers I have seen) for my new crabbing skiff. I am just wondering if I should come down to 4 1/2 feet wide but that is my only problem at this point. I should also note that I need a bigger fishing boat and looked at Diablo Grande, but have decided on a John Gardner 16 foot semi dory instead which I hope to do this fall or as soon as the runabout is done. |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On May 30, 4:10 pm, wrote:
Anybody know of any plans preferably stitch and glue, for a small 13-15 foot sport boat with a similar shape or performance as the 13 foot sport whalers, trihull design? Or any other suggestions for small, light open fishing boat, preferably not a pointy hull or single V, but not flat bottomed either, that would fish one person, and fly with a 25 horse? Thanks in advance for your suggestions. NOTE: I have a lot of experience with resin and cloth/glass and good wood working capabilities/shop and have done stitch and tape too, so I can take on a more difficult build without much problem. What you want is called a "garvey". There are plans in the two books by the late Thomas Firth Jones which you might find at the public library or can purchase via his website at www.jonesboats.com if it's still there. Or you could try searching the Internet for "garvey" which I have not done so can't say what will turn up. They are simple high performance planing hulls apparently popular among fishermen along the New Jersey shore. Jones compares them to Bosotn Walers. |
#5
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On Jun 4, 12:20 pm, Wm Watt wrote:
On May 30, 4:10 pm, wrote: Anybody know of any plans preferably stitch and glue, for a small 13-15 foot sport boat with a similar shape or performance as the 13 foot sport whalers, trihull design? Or any other suggestions for small, light open fishing boat, preferably not a pointy hull or single V, but not flat bottomed either, that would fish one person, and fly with a 25 horse? Thanks in advance for your suggestions. NOTE: I have a lot of experience with resin and cloth/glass and good wood working capabilities/shop and have done stitch and tape too, so I can take on a more difficult build without much problem. What you want is called a "garvey". There are plans in the two books by the late Thomas Firth Jones which you might find at the public library or can purchase via his website atwww.jonesboats.comif it's still there. Or you could try searching the Internet for "garvey" which I have not done so can't say what will turn up. They are simple high performance planing hulls apparently popular among fishermen along the New Jersey shore. Jones compares them to Bosotn Walers. Yes, Gardner has a couple of great Garvey style hulls, one is the right size but I want to build the tri hull. And for my "sound" boat I wanted something with higher sides than the garvey, and that would handle bigger water. Look at John Gardners 16 foot Dory Skiff in "The Dory Book" by the same, it is a pretty boat I think I can build pretty light. Thanks William nice to see you again so to say. |
#6
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On Jun 4, 3:43 pm, wrote:
Yes, Gardner has a couple of great Garvey style hulls, one is the right size but I want to build the tri hull. And for my "sound" boat I wanted something with higher sides than the garvey, and that would handle bigger water. Look at John Gardners 16 foot Dory Skiff in "The Dory Book" by the same, it is a pretty boat I think I can build pretty light. Thanks William nice to see you again so to say.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sorry, wasn't paying attention. Maybe someone will read it an want to build a garvey. |
#7
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On Jun 6, 11:21 am, Wm Watt wrote:
On Jun 4, 3:43 pm, wrote: Yes, Gardner has a couple of great Garvey style hulls, one is the right size but I want to build the tri hull. And for my "sound" boat I wanted something with higher sides than the garvey, and that would handle bigger water. Look at John Gardners 16 foot Dory Skiff in "The Dory Book" by the same, it is a pretty boat I think I can build pretty light. Thanks William nice to see you again so to say.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sorry, wasn't paying attention. Maybe someone will read it an want to build a garvey. No problem, I have not been real clear as to what I needed here as I am still deciding what will be the right boat for me, or two boats in this instance. I have all but ordered the material for the design I finished, won't be long now till I have some sawdust in my hair again, yipppppeeeee! |
#8
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
You wrote:
What you want is called a "garvey". There are plans in the two books by the late Thomas Firth Jones which you might find at the public library or can purchase via his website at www.jonesboats.com if it's still there... FYI: Yes, the site is still there, and Carol plans to keep it going and continue selling the plans as long as people are interested in them. Of course, Carol cannot provide the level of support that Tom did, but she can put buyers in touch with people who have used the plans before and who are willing to share the benefit of their experience. |
#9
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
I have 3 Boston Whalers in my family ( two 17 foot Montauks and a 15
footer) and I'm building a dory because the Boston Whaler might be the most over-rated boat in history. If your going fishing in a pond with no waves a whaler is great. If the lake has waves a whaler will drive you crazy.Forget about rowing a whaler. It's an awsome bayboat with a shallow draft but I'll take a flat bottomed dory anyday over a whaler. It's not a dry boat,you can't sail a whaler and it's terrible in trailing seas. It's actually extremely one dimensional which is it is good in shallow calm water and that's it. On Jun 4, 8:33 am, wrote: On Jun 3, 1:08 pm, KD6EVM wrote: wrote: Anybody know of any plans preferably stitch and glue, for a small 13-15 foot sport boat with a similar shape or performance as the 13 foot sport whalers, trihull design? Or any other suggestions for small, light open fishing boat, preferably not a pointy hull or single V, but not flat bottomed either, that would fish one person, and fly with a 25 horse? Thanks in advance for your suggestions. NOTE: I have a lot of experience with resin and cloth/glass and good wood working capabilities/shop and have done stitch and tape too, so I can take on a more difficult build without much problem. You're asking for a lot. The whaler hull is pretty complex. You might want to check out the Diablo or Diablo Grande: http://www.instantboats.com/diablog.htm If you have done stitch and tape you are probably already familiar with the Payson boats. IMO, performance is not the whaler's strong suit but rather safety and stability derived from whaler's sandwiched foam core construction. There may be some buildable designs basrd on the Livingston hulls that would meet your needs. If anyone knows of a Livingston tack and tape knock-off I would be interested in seeing it. Tom Yes, very familiar with Payson and the skiffs, however that is not the right boat for the job. I need a fast, shallow boat that can be powered easily or rowed for steerage in slow current. We would use this boat for single handed fishing in skinny water or at times to get out and play on the lake, aaaaaaand, it also needs to be useful as a crabbing skiff which I think it will. I have designed a whaler type hull of panels. It is 13 feet long and 5 feet wide. It should handle a good size motor for speed between fishing grounds, and still can be rowed around in the low water in crabbing season. Our origional crabbing skiff was Paysons skimmer, still a very fun boat but a little small for general fun. A 12 foot version would be ideal so I decided to go 13 and add a tri hull and some pleasing lines. I may start this week, I am very excited looking at the lines I have developed (borrowed from pics of many Whalers I have seen) for my new crabbing skiff. I am just wondering if I should come down to 4 1/2 feet wide but that is my only problem at this point. I should also note that I need a bigger fishing boat and looked at Diablo Grande, but have decided on a John Gardner 16 foot semi dory instead which I hope to do this fall or as soon as the runabout is done. |
#10
posted to rec.boats.building
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Plans for Whaler Sport type hull?
On Jul 6, 5:58 pm, wrote:
I have 3 Boston Whalers in my family ( two 17 foot Montauks and a 15 footer) and I'm building a dory because the Boston Whaler might be the most over-rated boat in history. If your going fishing in a pond with no waves a whaler is great. If the lake has waves a whaler will drive you crazy.Forget about rowing a whaler. It's an awsome bayboat with a shallow draft but I'll take a flat bottomed dory anyday over a whaler. It's not a dry boat,you can't sail a whaler and it's terrible in trailing seas. It's actually extremely one dimensional which is it is good in shallow calm water and that's it. Thanks for the input. I will take another look at the Montauks, but I think it is more of a vee hull with some planing decks, not a tri-hull like the sport 13, I could be wrong but I will look. I actually have a fishing boat for bigger water and the sound, but this one would be for small lakes, fishing, only waves are the ski boats. I would probably drag the kids around with a tube, and take it to the mouth of the river nights for crabbing. That's why I am interested in the square nose as it is best to crab with two up front and it's easier in a square than a pointy skiff. Another problem is for the small lakes I fish in now, my big pointy skiff is a little heavy to load and unload. I will go look at some boats, see if I can get a ride in a Whaler Sport before I start to build. If anyone wants to see the lines I drew up, send me an email and I will send over a file made with Carlson's "Hulls" software. I can send the whole program if you wish. It is a self contained, simple program that runs within it's own directory, no installation necessary. Anyway, hear is won't run right on Vista, but it runs fine for me on Vista. I am not affiliated with Carlson and have no interest except I think it is a cool program. And it's free. |
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