Pages

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Rotten, Forgotten or Rubish

What do you look for in buying a boat for a restoration project? Well it all depends on how extensive you want the restore project to be...


 Is it just to get on the water on a budget
    • look for a boat where you do not have to glass or replace entire panels
Is it for the pure joy of rebuilding a boat
    • The sky is the limit, get any boat
Do you have a deadline for when the boat should be in the water, eg Mirror World
    • Look for a boat with mainly cosmetic damage

Depending on these questions, here is what I do:

1.  Inspect the wood on the boat to see if there is any rotten areas
  • Generally poking you car key into the wood (when the current owner ain't looking) will give you an idea if the wood is hard and firm or soft and squishy.
  • If there are rot present, will you be able to replace the panel or if it is so small enough patch, do an invisible patch.
  • if the bulkheads or Hog is rotten, I would not go there, since you will have to rebuild almost the entire boat.
  • Be sure to look inside the watertight chambers, the inside can sometimes give you great insight into the wood condition (Take a torch along)
There was a 30cm x 20cm hole in the boat,
Patched it using marine ply, step joint and
epoxy.  The seems were later taped with
firbre glass tape for additional strength
Holes in hull plus some rot in the stringers.
 Luckily it ends just before the bulkhead,
so only a small panel needs replacement


2.  Are most of the fittings present and in working condition
  • One of the most expensive items, except the sails, are the various pieces of hardware.  Even if it is old, but still in working conditions, it will save you a lot of money.
  • eg a small block can cost on avg R200 ($20)

3.  Sails
  • Another expensive part to sailing is the actual Sails.  Like the engine of a car, they are your main propulsion.
  • Look for crisp clean sails that still have some stiffness to them...if they look like an old handkerchief, walk past
  • eg.  New sails for a 12ft boat would come in, depending on material, between R2500 and R5000 ($250 - $500)
Even thou the hull was in a state of neglect,
all the fittings were present and in good working conditions,
so well worth restoring on a budget

4 .  Hull Number/Measurement Certificate
  • First prize would be if the boat comes with a measurement certificate, but in the older boats, this seldom happens, since somewhere during the last decade or two the owner lost it.
  • Second prize would be a hull number. With this you can determine when it was built and have some insurance that it was built from the class plans.  This is however not an indication that the boat is class legal and will measure.
This boat had so much potential.  Only cosmetic damage to the hull that could be
 fixed over a weekend or two. BUT, no hull number, fittings and very old sails.

Next step - Where do I find a boat???

2 comments:

  1. Heeding your advice, I am off to view my first potential project.

    Frans in Gordonsbay.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hello Frans, sorry for the late late reply. Great, what boat did you get at the end of the day? I am merging this site (www.johnniesailor.com) with my other site and will soon be adding a restoration section. feel free to email me at restoration@johnniesailor.com if you have any questions.

      Delete

 

About

Restoring, Refurbing and Sailing. The continual pursuit of getting on the water on various sailboats, boards, etc

Total Pageviews