Monday, August 26, 2024

Index of Blog Entries

Find a topic of interest in the lefthand column and note the associated date (month/year), then click on the associated year in the righthand column, and you should find your chosen entry nearby.

 Boating is more Satisfying....          8/24

What is Next?                                   6/24

Careers and a Hobby                        6/24

A Smaller Kayak                              12/23

Finishing the Planked Hull                7/23

Rules for Developable Hull surfaces 6/23

Finalized kayak Design                      1/23

Starting a New Design: Kayak           1/23

Now I Have a Boat to Look at            8/22

Next Step in Design Evolution          11/21

A Real Sharpie                                    3/21

Another Guide Boat                            2/21

Finishing the Guide Boat                    12/20

Finishing the Planking                        5/20

Creating a Developable Surface         5/20

Solving the Hull Sheathing Conform. 4/20

Planking the Guide Boat                     9/19

Garboard Sheathing                            7/19

Viking Ship Museum, Hull Fairing     6/19

Defining the Shape                              3/19

Creating a Boat 'Skeleton'                    3/19

Starting to Cut Wood                            2/19

First Steps for the New Design            12/18

The Improved Guide Boat                   10/18

Getting Ready to Build                         7/17

Completed New Model                         9/16

New Design Model, Part II                   8/16

Creating a Model for a New Design     8/16

Beautiful Boats of Scandinavia             7/16

Vietnam Memories                                10/15

Along the Adriatic Coast                       10/15

Grand Tetons N.P. Boating                     8/15

Modified 'Next Boat' Design                  4/15

Sail Design                                              2/15

Next Boat?                                              12/14

A Day at the Lake                                    9/14

Resting on its Design Waterline              7/14

At Flaming Gorge, Utah                          7/14

What a Day!                                             5/14

The New Boat Looks Complete               3/14

Why I use Rosin Paper                             3/14

The Boat Windshield                                2/14

Winter Progress                                         2/14

A Voyage to Remember                             11/13

Instrument Panel                                        11/13

Now for the Accessories                            10/13

Sample Developable Design Calculation   7/13

To the Deck and Onward                            7/13

Slow but Steady Progress                           5/13

Finally, the Hull is Turned Over                 1/13

Hull Sheathing                                            7/12

The Origin of Boat Bowls                           4/12

Another Year, Another Boat                        4/12

First Season Report                                     9/11

A Trial Run                                                  6/11

Finally in the Water!                                    5/11

Out of the Shop                                            12/10

Ready to Leave the Shop                             10/10

Finishing the Stern, Onto the Windshield     7/10

Wood Decking                                               7/10

Interior Details                                               6/10

Finally, the Hull is Upright                            4/10

Planking the Hull                                          11/09

Initial Hull Sheathing                                      8/09

The Design Becomes a Reality                       5/09        

Hull Design Using Simple Mathematics       12/08

Design Evolution                                             7/07

New Direction                                                 7/07

Model Lobster Boat                                       11/06

Updated Drawings                                           9/06

Maiden Voyage                                                5/06

A Semi-planing Powerboat                              5/06

Guide Boat Pictures                                         5/06

Adirondack Guide Boat Concept                     5/06

A Real Disappointment                                    5/06

Panama Skiff                                                    5/06

Kayoe or Canak?                                              5/06

Where did this Unusual Interest Originate?     5/06

     

         


Sunday, August 25, 2024

Boating is more Satisfying when the Boat is your own Design

 


I designed and built this 18.5-foot-long runabout which was completed in 2014.  Size-wise, it has ample space for up to six people.  The 75 HP engine is good for about 35 MPH, although altitude, load, prop pitch, and even wind resistance can be factors.  Someday, I would like to run it at low altitude to see how much more speed might be attained.  It is light and easy to tow, due to the wood/epoxy construction, which is important because here in Colorado there are very few nearby lakes.  We have towed it as far away as Coeur d' Alene, Idaho.   Being light also means that it takes less horsepower to move it through the water, and it is very fuel efficient.  The only drawback to being light is that when maneuvering for retrieval to its trailer on a windy day, wind can push it off course when at idling speed.

Behind my runabout in the above photo, "Mountain Dancer", the larger green and white boat is my brother's 27-foot Sea Ray cruiser.  It is ocean-capable and has twin engines totaling about 450 HP.  

This past weekend, we ran the boat on Ruedi Reservoir (7,800' elevation), near Aspen, Colorado.  The weather was perfect except for an uptick in wind speed during retrieval of the boat.  The weather this past weekend was unpredictable with quick shifts between sun and clouds or rain.  Fortunately, everyone did their part to properly position the boat and trailer.  The dock at Ruedi is pathetically small which didn't allow much space for handling of the docking lines.

A few years ago, when my brother, Jay, and I both had our boats on Jackson Lake, Grand Teton, NP, his wife, Connie, made a short video of my runabout on the lake.  The scenery there is spectacular, and you can see the runabout moving smoothly across the lake's surface.  If we are lucky, you may be able to view this video on YouTube at the following address:

 https://youtu.be/X1m7WiJS7S8


                  
We have the full canvas enclosure for our runabout in case of bad weather or the rare choice to sleep aboard.