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HarryK[_4_] December 13th 10 03:44 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
On 12/13/10 10:42 AM, I am Tosk wrote:


Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs...... that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.


27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?


Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Going snotty again, scotty?


YukonBound December 13th 10 04:19 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse engine
will
make the thing fly too...

--
Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.


27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?


Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx


HarryK[_4_] December 13th 10 04:30 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
On 12/13/10 11:19 AM, YukonBound wrote:


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present
dinghy except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the
small one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them
with us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse
engine will
make the thing fly too...

-- Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?


Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx



That's really funny...Scotty lying about the measurements of someone
else's boat and of course doing it in an insulting way. It's funny
because we've all seen photos of some of Scotty's boats and the time and
effort he spends "finishing" them with leftover house paint from the
"mismatched/out-of-date table" at Home Despot. He keeps them up nicely,
too, what with weathered, peeling paint and checked plywood.

By the way, some of the best-riding classy small boats have or had round
bilges. Methinks Scotty is jealous because his stitch'n'glue technique
lends itself to mostly hard chined, flat-bottomed boats, boats that
pound in a head sea.

See, Scotty - it takes no effort to be as snotty as you are. Are you
sure you want to continue down the road to the past? I know your boy(s)
Ziggy, CrotchDon, the HarryK spoofer, LG and BAR do...but do you?





Don Won December 13th 10 04:34 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be


Nice insulting and name calling. That should help with the group
harmony.

HarryK[_4_] December 13th 10 04:41 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
On 12/13/10 11:19 AM, YukonBound wrote:


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present
dinghy except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the
small one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them
with us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse
engine will
make the thing fly too...

-- Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?


Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx




When you are really short, 3' looks like 6' and 6' looks like the Grand
Canyon.

What say you, Scotty? Want to behave or want to be the old, Snotty Scotty?


Ziggy®[_2_] December 13th 10 04:47 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
"YukonBound" wrote in message ...


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse engine
will
make the thing fly too...

--
Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?


Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx


How do you drive that thing? There's no steering wheel.

--
Ziggy®

YukonBound December 13th 10 04:49 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 


"Ziggy®" wrote in message
...
"YukonBound" wrote in message
...


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next
step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them
with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about
the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an
outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would
be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse engine
will
make the thing fly too...

--
Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?

Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx


How do you drive that thing? There's no steering wheel.

--
Ziggy®


The way real sailors "drive boats"..... with a tiller (handle tiller in
this case)


Ziggy®[_2_] December 13th 10 04:50 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
"HarryK" wrote in message ...
On 12/13/10 11:19 AM, YukonBound wrote:


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present
dinghy except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the
small one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share them
with us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse
engine will
make the thing fly too...

-- Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?

Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx



That's really funny...Scotty lying about the measurements of someone
else's boat and of course doing it in an insulting way. It's funny
because we've all seen photos of some of Scotty's boats and the time and
effort he spends "finishing" them with leftover house paint from the
"mismatched/out-of-date table" at Home Despot. He keeps them up nicely,
too, what with weathered, peeling paint and checked plywood.

By the way, some of the best-riding classy small boats have or had round
bilges. Methinks Scotty is jealous because his stitch'n'glue technique
lends itself to mostly hard chined, flat-bottomed boats, boats that
pound in a head sea.

See, Scotty - it takes no effort to be as snotty as you are. Are you
sure you want to continue down the road to the past? I know your boy(s)
Ziggy, CrotchDon, the HarryK spoofer, LG and BAR do...but do you?





I suspect that Scoty, being a long time admirer of yours, will follow your lead.

--
Ziggy®

HarryK[_4_] December 13th 10 04:51 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
On 12/13/10 11:49 AM, YukonBound wrote:


"Ziggy®" wrote in message
...
"YukonBound" wrote in message
...


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next
step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share
them with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about
the
stresses at the attachment point joining the two halves. Growing
the
boat larger would only make that worse, especially with an
outboard
big enough to reach planing speeds.

The design was intended as a small rowing and sailing dinghy and
that
is probably where it should stay.

I'm thinking that one of Scott's Brockway Skiffs could
probably be
built as a two piece boat that would be more suitable for a big
outboard if the right attachment method could be found. It
would be
heavy though unless built with high tech materials.

http://www.yaimkool.com/

http://photobucket.com/images/brockway%20skiff/

You know.. A one piece 12 foot version of that boat can be built
under
200 pounds or at least close. A 12 footer can carry 4 folks
comfortably
with probably 6-800 pounds of gear and supplies. An 8 horse engine
will
make the thing fly too...

-- Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever!

Must be a magic boat.
My 14.5 foot aluminum boat is rated for just under 900 lbs......
that is
three adults and gear here in Canada.

27 mph is "flying" in your neck of the woods?

Don't mind the trolls. I have been in Don's rowboat, it's about 3 feet
wide with a round bilge and stem..... Ever hear the term, "Apples and
Oranges"?


Is that so?
Maybe Tom will act as the voice of truth here.
I say it's about 67" wide with a nice wide transom.... I have, and can
again, provide pictures.
You've been outted as a bald faced liar Scotty........ no surprise
there!
http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e.../Yukon-15.aspx


How do you drive that thing? There's no steering wheel.

--
Ziggy®


The way real sailors "drive boats"..... with a tiller (handle tiller in
this case)



Ziggy, like BAR, is boatless and probably tiller-less, too.

Don Won December 13th 10 05:02 PM

Very Cool Boat Building Kit
 
In article ,
says...

On 12/13/10 11:49 AM, YukonBound wrote:


"Ziggy®" wrote in message
...
"YukonBound" wrote in message
...


"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

"I am Tosk" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 11:02:22 -0500, John H
wrote:

It wouldn't be that different from launching the present dinghy
except
for the reassembly. The small section would go in first with
the
bow
painter on it, then tie it off on the stern of the big boat.
Next
you'd launch the big section with a stern line on it. Next
step
would be to get into the big section, line it up with the small
one
and bolt them together. It would be difficult in windy weather
but we
try to avoid that even now.

The important thing is to take lots of pictures and share
them with
us!

You know I'd do that.

I'm beginning to have my doubts about the feasability of the
"stretch"
modification however. Some good points have been raised about


How do you know?


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