Search results

TinBoats.net

Help Support TinBoats.net:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
  1. enginerd

    1959 Lone Star clipper

    Beautiful boat and will be interested to see your progress as it goes. As has been noted, it looks like it is "Newport Green" and I would guess that would make it a mid-50's boat. Good luck and please post your progress.
  2. enginerd

    How old is your tin boat?

    I have a 1962 Lone Star Malibu In 1965, Lone Star was acquired by Chrysler and became the Chrysler Boat Corporation, which continued production until 1979 when they closed the doors on their marine division. They chose to focus on their fiberglass boats (Lone star made both), but Chrysler did...
  3. enginerd

    Lonestar Cruiseliner ??

    I've been stalking Craig's List for a Lone Star Cruisemaster and have happened across a few Cruiseliners (or similar): https://spokane.craigslist.org/boa/6142993816.html https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/boa/6136257960.html https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/dak/boa/6107414004.html
  4. enginerd

    Help with Lone Star Boat ID - Model and year

    If it's a 50s Lone Star, I think it would be a 1958. In that era the leading digit of the HID was supposedly the last digit of the year. The next three numbers were specific to the model and the last 4 numbers were the number in the production run. The B leading the serial number is...
  5. enginerd

    Deck framing with rigid foam

    It will work on polystyrene with no reaction and holds well; I did several test runs before using it to glue in some foam blocks along my transom. It's a water activated expanding polyurethane foam, it's completely waterproof when dry, and bonds exceptionally well.
  6. enginerd

    1962 Lone Star Malibu

    Thanks, that's the original graphics, but I substituted the teal (they did offer it in a smilar color) for the original red.
  7. enginerd

    1962 Lone Star Malibu

    Thanks Johnny; it look longer than I was hoping, but I can't wait to get it out on the water. How is your Malibu coming along?
  8. enginerd

    1962 Lone Star Malibu

    It's been a while, but over the old wet winter we've had here in the Pacific Northwest I've managed to just about get everything finished up on the boat. I got my wiring finished up and installed a new battery. The new LED bulbs in the navigation lights look goo and the horn I jury rigged with...
  9. enginerd

    Fuse size

    With 12-ga wire and that short a run you can safely use a 20-amp fuse.
  10. enginerd

    Hatch switches.

    I was going to suggest the same thing; I have similar lights in my gun safe and ammunition cabinet that run on a few AA batteries, which just needed replacement after 2-years. Mine are motion activated and as soon as you open the door they come on and provide good light. Otherwise, one of...
  11. enginerd

    It's All Covered!

    Impressive work; makes me wish I had the equipment and skill.
  12. enginerd

    Fuse size

    What size wire are you running to it and how long is the run? Does the 12-V outlet have an amp rating? What do you plan to use it for? Of hand, I'd probably use a 15-amp fuse, but that would depend on the answers to the above questions. That assumes a relatively short run with 14-ga wire and...
  13. enginerd

    Questions regarding electronics

    Looks good to me, though you're missing the stern light in your diagram. I'd think one battery would be enough, but having the back-up isn't a bad thing and leaves room for expansion in the future.
  14. enginerd

    New way of looking at flotation

    You wouldn't by chance have taken any pictures or gotten the specs on that foam? Sounds like a good solution to me, as long as it's closed cell foam and held in place well. As I said in another recent post, I think the trick is to keep your foam from sitting in water over a long period of time...
  15. enginerd

    Questions regarding electronics

    Does your outboard charge the battery when it's running? I think most engines with electric ignition will. Either way, I think the load you plan to put on it should be light enough that one 12-V battery should be fine. LED navigation lights and deck lights shouldn't be much of a draw at all...
  16. enginerd

    flotation

    I used both rigid foam sheets and poured liquid urethane foam in my build. I've seen many assertions that any foam will absorb water, and to an extent that is true, but it has a lot to do with how long you allow your foam to sit in water. A closed cell foam won't absorb water, at least on a...
  17. enginerd

    My latest build

    That's a sharp looking boat.
  18. enginerd

    Paint Removal - product evaluation

    I don't envy the project you have ahead of you. Stripping my Lone Star took much, much longer than I thought it would and it's definitely not a project I would care to repeat (your video gave me flashbacks). I ended up doing most of my stripping with a palm-sander and 80-grit, which seemed to...
  19. enginerd

    24V System

    Wiring in series will add voltages (e.g. two 12-V batteries wired in series produce 24-V),but does not change capacity (AH). If you have multiple 24-V batteries, wiring them in parallel will add amperage (e.g. two 24-V batteries rated for 100-AH wired in parallel would produce 24-V and have a...
  20. enginerd

    Short video on reading charts...

    Good video with an overview of the chart. Of course, being a hydro-nerd, I have to comment. If you're looking for a quick reference on your charts, I'd suggest investing in a copy of Chart No. 1 (https://www.amazon.com/Chart-No-Symbols-Abbreviations-Terms/dp/0939837560/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0)...
Top