Re: Fiting extras to a porta-bote
a few pics of the revised woodwork
the bow board which keeps stuff in the bow dry and keeps waves from coming up the PB's "snoot"....i replaced the plastic hunk o junk that PB supplies for this purpose and replaced it with 1/2" plywood, with a hunk of old motorcycle inner tube across the snoot. the "V" shaped boards on top are to divert any waves that do come across the bow from draining into the bote, and work as planned in empirical testing.
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i prefer to use a landing net rather than a gaff for all but biggest fish, as it greatly improves survival rates on catch n release.

however, the thing is a pain to have floating around the bote. here's my solution: clips screwed to top of bow board to hold the "hoop" of net in place on bow. last trip, my bow rope fell overboard without me noticing, until it got tangled in prop and motor quit. so it now lives coiled up in the clips right under the landing net.
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the revised rod and gaff holder. top is screwed to top of seats (i use 10-24 machine screws with regular nuts and then wingnuts for locknuts)(i started out using all stainless hardware, but have gone to a mix of SS and mild steel because the corrosion acts as poor man;'s Loctite) and lower section to the angled support under the seat. if you do this, plan on spending lots of time being sure the holes line up, and ovalizing the lower holes and sanding edges of holes round to ease removal of rods when bote hull is flexing. rotary drum sander on an electric drill works great for this.
[/URL][/IMG]finally, here's one of the other side. cutouts in board are for knives and pliers, and holes are for tiedowns to keep tackle box, cooler, etc in place when hull is flexing.
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basically, all this stuff adds about 15-20 min to setup but has been well worth it when i head out to sea.