1985 Tracker III Restore/Conversion

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onthewater102 said:
I got my Dr. Frankenmotor on, restored this old 88 Merc 60hp using the cowling and starter from an older setup and a full rebuild of the carbs, fuel pump, impeller, pivot, steering tube and who knows what else. Adjusted the timing and idle settings in the backyard and set the max spark advance per the FSM & have the thing purring like a kitten on the muffs.

lVLraZV.jpg


Finished the reinstallation of the shifter controls and helm, cracked as it is, to be used as a form and coated over in fiberglass at a later date.The original helm is some sort of plastic (poly by the way it seemed to melt and refuse as I cut it with the reciprocating saw in places) and doesn't seem to be responding well to my plastic welder.

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Plenty of odds and ends were done on the front deck that didn't get pictures including building the door for the rod locker, installing the new fuse box and rewiring everything, adding provisions for a pair of fish finders, replacing the livewell pump motor, bilge pump, circuit panel in the bow with the USB charger & 12v socket, separate red & green nav lights, trolling motor outlet, installing hatches & trim around the hatch openings, fabbing up a lure rack for along the gunwale in the front and probably a few dozen other little items. Also stripped any old carpet backing still glued to the rear deck and removed all but the most stubborn of the old carpet glue. Tracker did such a piss poor job laying out the rear deck it's just an overlapping collage of sheet metal and rivets I'd never be able to paint over it and have it come out clean so I ordered carpet for just the rear deck and Tuff Coat for the front 2/3 of the boat. Prior to prepping it all for paint it looked like this:

YAqEIL4.jpg


Spent a considerable amount of time taping around the edges and even more time cleaning, sanding, and cleaning all the surfaces to be painted before applying primer. All in the prep work was a full day's worth of time.

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Finally got to painting from the middle bench forward over the Memorial Day weekend, so the front 2/3 of the boat are close to done, just a few bleed-throughs to be cleaned up where either the paint or primer made their way through the taped off areas to the surfaces below, mainly on the electrical sockets up front.

EcbEIpI.jpg


Bench cushion rivets to be installed now that the bench is painted, and the bench cushion shortly thereafter. Only things remaining now are the rear carpet, livewell remote controls and pull cord modification to the Terrova that I think I'll make a separate thread for.

If you are not dead-set on keeping that console, you can drill the rivets out of the aluminum base and build up off of that.

My Tracker V17 had the same one, but mine was way worse than yours, I did as above and built a new one out of plywood, reused the rotary steering, and just swapped the steering with a nicer one from Ebay.
 
MrGiggles said:
If you are not dead-set on keeping that console, you can drill the rivets out of the aluminum base and build up off of that.

My Tracker V17 had the same one, but mine was way worse than yours, I did as above and built a new one out of plywood, reused the rotary steering, and just swapped the steering with a nicer one from Ebay.

I'm not beholden to the console, but it's got a nice low profile, and I think it'll be faster to bury it in fiberglass than it will be to fabricate something entirely new. I'm definitely dumping the original steering wheel in the process one way or the other. I need to add on a protrusion for a tach for the new motor (upgraded to a new 4-stroke Yamaha F60), which shouldn't be hard if I'm playing with fiberglass, and maybe add a windshield. Not getting into any of that though until I finish breaking in the new motor as I've got a week long trip in May fast approaching that I want it all ready to go for.
 
onthewater102 said:
MrGiggles said:
If you are not dead-set on keeping that console, you can drill the rivets out of the aluminum base and build up off of that.

My Tracker V17 had the same one, but mine was way worse than yours, I did as above and built a new one out of plywood, reused the rotary steering, and just swapped the steering with a nicer one from Ebay.

I'm not beholden to the console, but it's got a nice low profile, and I think it'll be faster to bury it in fiberglass than it will be to fabricate something entirely new. I'm definitely dumping the original steering wheel in the process one way or the other. I need to add on a protrusion for a tach for the new motor (upgraded to a new 4-stroke Yamaha F60), which shouldn't be hard if I'm playing with fiberglass, and maybe add a windshield. Not getting into any of that though until I finish breaking in the new motor as I've got a week long trip in May fast approaching that I want it all ready to go for.

Looking on your photos again I'm not sure that you could anyway.

Your deck goes all the way to console, mine doesn't, the plastic console had an aluminum base that mounted to the floor, doesn't look like yours did.

I've seen guys make custom speaker boxes out of fiberglass by cutting round donuts out of MDF, suspending them with dowels and hot glue, then stretching cloth over the whole deal and applying resin/mat over that. I figured you could do the same with a boat console, build the base, cut out your dash panel, stretch the cloth out to the desired console shape and have a pretty slick looking setup.

I've also seen people make a mold out of foam, but that seems more timing consuming to me.
 
MrGiggles said:
Looking on your photos again I'm not sure that you could anyway.

Your deck goes all the way to console, mine doesn't, the plastic console had an aluminum base that mounted to the floor, doesn't look like yours did.

I've seen guys make custom speaker boxes out of fiberglass by cutting round donuts out of MDF, suspending them with dowels and hot glue, then stretching cloth over the whole deal and applying resin/mat over that. I figured you could do the same with a boat console, build the base, cut out your dash panel, stretch the cloth out to the desired console shape and have a pretty slick looking setup.

I've also seen people make a mold out of foam, but that seems more timing consuming to me.

I had to add aluminum flanges to the decking surface to have something mount the console to, they run up the inside face of the vertical side surfaces of the console so you don't see them in the pictures.


If you're going to go trying to fabricate something try window screening as a forming material - a bit more rigid than trying to stretch cloth, applying fiberglass to it is easy, you just need to get the gel style resin rather than the more liquid stuff. I've got a perfectly good form in the plastic console that's there already, so I'll just scuff that thing up so the resin has plenty of surface area to bond to and cover the whole thing.
 
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