Ail
Well-known member
That dowel jig is mighty handy, and that looks like a solid joint. Well done. Being able to improvise and still get to where you want is necessity for a true DIY craftsman. :mrgreen:
[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363400#p363400 said:SaltyGhost » 22 minutes ago[/url]"]It's coming along great. I love boats that have the windshield all the way in the front. Very few new boats have this design which is a shame. It's real nice when the temp drops and you still want to go boating. You won't freeze to death from the wind when going fast.
:idea: I would recommend using a 2-part marine epoxy to glue-up wood for a boat. That titebond III wood glue says its waterproof but it's not really made for marine environments. It's not submersible, which may be OK, but if your boat gets a bunch of water in it for any length of time the glue will fail. I like the 5-minute stuff because it sets-up quick and is usable in less than an hour. You can but it at any decent hardware store.
[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363591#p363591 said:bobberboy » 17 Aug 2014, 18:59[/url]"]Part of learning is making mistakes and it's good to be up front about them. Sometimes they make better reading than the successes too.
So I glued the other half of the floor on and did what comes naturally to a woodworker and got the saw out. I'll review the thinking:
Got the rest of the plywood glued together and prepared to transfer the template to it. The template was made on top of the aluminum framing and so represented the bottom of the plywood. So, turned the plywood upside down and put the template on it upside down and traced around it. Mind you, I made the cardboard template to within 1/8" of the boat's interior profile. Understanding that the sides of the boat flare out and away from where the template I set my saber saw at an angle and cut so the top face of the plywood would be wider than the bottom and thus taking into account the different profile of the interior at the level of the framing versus 3/4" above the framing. I cut, I turned it over, I placed it in the boat and it didn't fit. Not even close. It was as if I had my eyes closed or had made the template for some other boat or I had used my good friend the Auto-beaver (patent pending) to do the cutting. Dang it anyway.
I did a lot of looking, a lot of taking it out and cutting and adjusting of angles but it just never fit right. I put it aside for a day and went back and decided to take a different tack. All the things I did made sense, I think.
There are a couple of things I didn't think through completely and they caused problems. First of all were the angles of the sides. In a jon boat, the angle of the sides from front to back is relatively straight compared to a V-bottom which has a much more distinct curve to it. The sides of the jon boat go out from bottom to top at a relatively consistent angle compared to those of a V-bottom boat. The geometry of the jon is simpler, easier to understand and predict whereas the V-bottom boat's curve is compound, changing as it goes up and forward. At the back end of the plywood the V-bottom's sides are almost 90° to that of the floor. At a foot or so forward of that, the sides are somewhere 15° off and by the time you get to the front the angle is probably somewhere around 60° off. The other problem is the thing was too big to manage and too big to be able to accurately see underneath where it fit and didn't fit.
I don't know how I went stupid and I don't still know what went wrong. I know guys put decks in V-bottom boats all the time and there are about a thousand threads on this site to prove it. So anyway, I went back and cut those carefully made joints apart. I'm now going to fit each side first, making the space between them parallel and after I've made them fit correctly I will rejoin each half. But not until I've got a day or two of fishing in.
OK. Now ya'll starting to scare me here... I'm just now getting into the process of planning the framing for under the floor and decks on my 12' V bottom. Then will come the cardboard template. Giving me a minds eye picture of what I have to look forward to... Ugggg.[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363603#p363603 said:Edintampa » August 17th, 2014, 9:27 pm[/url]"]The same thing happened to me when I did the decking on my 14' V bottom StarCraft. Cardboard template, double check it. Cut the cardboard, laid it on the plywood cut it 1/4 " less to be sure.....nada, nope it was still too big. Never figured out why just keep cutting a little off at a time till it did fit.
At least you had some idea of why.....
Ed
[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363617#p363617 said:Y_J » Yesterday, 21:52[/url]"]OK. Now ya'll starting to scare me here... I'm just now getting into the process of planning the framing for under the floor and decks on my 12' V bottom. Then will come the cardboard template. Giving me a minds eye picture of what I have to look forward to... Ugggg.[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363603#p363603 said:Edintampa » August 17th, 2014, 9:27 pm[/url]"]The same thing happened to me when I did the decking on my 14' V bottom StarCraft. Cardboard template, double check it. Cut the cardboard, laid it on the plywood cut it 1/4 " less to be sure.....nada, nope it was still too big. Never figured out why just keep cutting a little off at a time till it did fit.
At least you had some idea of why.....
Ed
[url=https://www.tinboats.net/forum/viewtopic.php?p=363724#p363724 said:Y_J » 3 minutes ago[/url]"]Right on.. I expect to make some mistakes here and there, as this is my first rebuild. And to make things worse this boat is beat up bad enough as it is. LOL So I'm trying to make a decent looking boat out of a pile of camel dung. Leave it to me to opt for the downtrodden.
kept track of all the costs of rebuilding their boat?
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