D
Deleted member 340796
Guest
I am restoring my first boat and I am running into a few questions along the way. I am hoping you guys can steer me in the right direction. The boat is a 1970 Caravelle Fish and Ski (best I can tell it is the Barracuda). I have a Mercury 65 HP 4 cylinder motor on it that seems to run fine and a trolling motor that also runs fine. The problem was the transom was cracked and the floor was rotten. So I stripped it down and removed the top and started ripping out rotten wood. I was able to remove the entire transom in about 30 - 40 minutes by hand alone. Scary! The floor took more time but mostly because the fiberglass in most areas was still pretty strong. At this point I only have about 20 hours in to the demo and I am almost at the bare bones of the hull. My first concern is with water pooling on the outer tops of the hulls (both sides). The boat was made in a way that along both sides on the upper/outer most hull, about 2/3rds of they way back from the bow - the hull is a different (higher) surface than the front. Because the boat is a multi hulled boat that leaves an area where if water gets in, it just wants to sit in those pockets. My question is should I use a fillet to fill in those areas so that water does not have the ability to pool there in the future?
Next, the center most stringer was in the very lowest point in the boat. That is the same area where water should drain to and then with gravity make its way to the bilge area. First how does the water make it to that lower point from the sides if there are other stringers in place? Do I need to allow channels for the water to drain through so that it can get to the lowest point or to guide it to the back of the boat and then down to the bilge area? I am also concerned with the placement of the middle stringer as it is in the lowest point of the hull where I would think water would gather before it moves to the bilge area. How can I allow for that drainage path without the risk of rotting out the wood again? I understand that the fiberglass will waterproof the wood but it got to the wood and severely rotted it out already so I am afraid of that happening again. Any thoughts, knowledge or ideas would be greatly appreciated here.
I have also never done grinding before either so I want to make sure I am doing this correctly. I realize it is difficult to see everything in the photos, but how much am I grinding? Do I need to grind down 100% of the interior including the blue they had on there previously or just the area I am going to be applying new fiberglass, or what? There are some areas that are much heavier in old glass do I need to remove all that glass even if it does not affect my stringers or ribs? The boat shell is pretty thinly made so I don't want to over grind anything.
Oh, one last thing I can think of now to ask about, there is a perfectly drilled whole right under the captains area that appears to be a 1/8th inch drill bit size. Can anyone tell me why that is there? I want to put in a fish finder and depth gauge. Is it possible this whole was for one of those at some point? I have not looked into how those install yet so I was not sure if it had to do with something like that. Otherwise I will just fill it in as I glass.
Can anyone think of any other things I should beware of, look for, or need to know at this point? I am using epoxy to glass this back in. I also goofed and cut through the hull in 2 small areas so I will need to repair those too. Forgot it was a multi hulled boat and was not thinking far enough ahead. DUH! Sure which my Grandfather was still alive, he could coach me on this. Well, guys the coaching is left in your hands. I am a 44 yr old woman who is independent and determined so guide me please. View attachment 149891
Next, the center most stringer was in the very lowest point in the boat. That is the same area where water should drain to and then with gravity make its way to the bilge area. First how does the water make it to that lower point from the sides if there are other stringers in place? Do I need to allow channels for the water to drain through so that it can get to the lowest point or to guide it to the back of the boat and then down to the bilge area? I am also concerned with the placement of the middle stringer as it is in the lowest point of the hull where I would think water would gather before it moves to the bilge area. How can I allow for that drainage path without the risk of rotting out the wood again? I understand that the fiberglass will waterproof the wood but it got to the wood and severely rotted it out already so I am afraid of that happening again. Any thoughts, knowledge or ideas would be greatly appreciated here.
I have also never done grinding before either so I want to make sure I am doing this correctly. I realize it is difficult to see everything in the photos, but how much am I grinding? Do I need to grind down 100% of the interior including the blue they had on there previously or just the area I am going to be applying new fiberglass, or what? There are some areas that are much heavier in old glass do I need to remove all that glass even if it does not affect my stringers or ribs? The boat shell is pretty thinly made so I don't want to over grind anything.
Oh, one last thing I can think of now to ask about, there is a perfectly drilled whole right under the captains area that appears to be a 1/8th inch drill bit size. Can anyone tell me why that is there? I want to put in a fish finder and depth gauge. Is it possible this whole was for one of those at some point? I have not looked into how those install yet so I was not sure if it had to do with something like that. Otherwise I will just fill it in as I glass.
Can anyone think of any other things I should beware of, look for, or need to know at this point? I am using epoxy to glass this back in. I also goofed and cut through the hull in 2 small areas so I will need to repair those too. Forgot it was a multi hulled boat and was not thinking far enough ahead. DUH! Sure which my Grandfather was still alive, he could coach me on this. Well, guys the coaching is left in your hands. I am a 44 yr old woman who is independent and determined so guide me please. View attachment 149891




