Pro tip. Using a couple of saw horses or even just garbage cans to place the plywood on while you mark out the curves would save your back. Don't be like the rest of us and only think about protecting our bodies until we are old and the damage is done. Great job on the boat!
I heavily encourage this level of kid/friends hang out.. stay off the streets and out of trouble and build wholesome memories with the bois.. i just wish more kids would do projects like this and keep their personal lives off tiktok this project is looking insane for a group of kids that have never done this before. I’m working up the motivation to start working on my 38 foot neria ketch.. saved her from the crusher last year. Too much work to do by myself being injured but I’ll figure it out
well done young man. I often had dreams of doing such thing at your age but had neither the space or mainly drive to materialise them. You should be proud of yourself and i hope you had great fun with the boat.
I am so inspired by you Bless Man . I know your family and love ones are so proud of each and everyone yall. Thank you for sharing your time, spending all that googobs of money to show us that how our ideas are capable of coming into existence right before our eyes . This is my 1st time to your channel. I'm glad I did watch it. Yall are a blessing working together and you explain thorough and comprehensible . Great job you captivated my attention. I give this video☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Just stumbled across your channel. While I'm not building a boat, I am restoring a 22 foot tanzer, the hull is solid, everything else needs to be rebuilt. The plan is to learn to sail on it, then sell it and move onto a 40 footer. Best of luck with your project, you've gained a subscriber. Fair winds.
Rebuild the Tanzer and forget about the 40er trust me I went small-Big-smaller and now have a Montgomery 17 that has sailed Florida Keys, Lake Erie, Fl-Bahamas and I’m contemplating taking it CA-Hawaii. You will sink a ton of money into a 40’er and sail 1/4 as much as a smaller boat.
@@georgewashington7444 All fair and valid points. My eventual goal is to liveaboard, so some additional space is required. But for a vessel to sail and not live on permanently, you certainly can’t beat the 17-25 for range. I’m not in a huge hurry to upgrade though. I appreciate the comment. Fair winds.
Awesome work! For future reference, when using gorilla glue dampen your work piece prior, so it will activate the glue. (It will foam up). Wipe the excess amount of foam a few times then let it set. (That’s the proper way to use that particular gorilla glue. It’s meant to foam up and fill then harden. Not just dry set it and forget it) Great work on the entire thing nonetheless!
There are a hundred different ways to do this better or more efficiently.. none of which matter at all.. what matters is that you got stuck in and just did it when you could have been online playing games .. well done 👍.
It's very much not (knot? :) ), but if it's for a fun learning experience, is glassed and epoxied, carefully maintained between outings, and doesn't spend too much time in the weather, it should last for a few years of fun... long enough to either get bored with the hobby, or to get a taste for what better to do for his next boat :)
I highly encourage that you build your own. I've deviated from the plans and have started making my own modifications. Building your own boats really gives you the freedom to do what you want.
Marine-grade plywood uses a glue resistant to water, and although it is a bit more expensive compared to what HomeDepot sells, you are getting what you paid for.
Also depends on his final cover though. Entire fiberglass the thing, and no need to worry about the marine grade (all in all, not 100% though if you get what I’m saying)
@1:25 - Ya like, maybe a big slide projector (actually an overhead projector) and just trace. I am lazy. Is that place on Rosecrans (Glen L Marine ?) still there? They sold plans and kits - back in the 60's -
Well done. I am all for just going for it, and putting whatever you have On TH-cam. Enjoy watching any learning curve, and even more so doing something worthwile. But i would enjoy it more, if you’d tinker a bit with your volume settings. The Music is really overshadowing everything, annoyingly even, as it really jumps up and Down. But love to see the progress. 👍
Thank for your comment. I'm working of the volume. As of right now, I've purchased a better microphone for recording voice overs so my videos in the future should be better audio wise.
The plans for this boat aren't my original plans. If you want to purchase them, you can visit duckworks.com and find them there. The type of boat that I'm building is called the Naut 450.
Bro how could someone say they have no knowledge of boat building and go and draw custom schematics with a TI calculator!? Maybe it’s cause I’m from the Bronx and never had a woodworking class but damn it seems like you really know what you doing! I wish I knew how to do this 😢😢
For my budget and type of boat that I wanted to build, I did find the cheapest plans. There a hundreds of free boat plans on the Internet, you just need to start searching. I didn't want to show off in the video but the calculations I made was just simple addition and subtraction. Also, I never took a woodworking class too. I just found other TH-cam videos that greatly helped. Anything is possible bro, you just have to start.
if u change blade on the jigsaw then the playwood wont splinter so much, take a blade with smaller teeth maby a higher quality brand, it says on the package. Just a hint..
@@JackWood25 im gonna give you a other hint, when you do use epoxy for filling, please mix in some milled fiberglass fibers (u can take some matting and cut very fine pieces to) or microglass ballons or even normal wood sawdust, otherwise it can crack, epoxy is very strong but very brittle, like concrete without rebars. i wouldnt use plain epoxy or polyester more than 0,8mm thick without anything else in it.
I do. If you check out this link, it'll take you directly to the plans that I used. I did have to pay for them but if you look around, they have some pretty cool free boat plans. Link: duckworks.com/naut450-cutter-450-plans/
I'm worried you changed the plans. Plans are there for a reason. But what do I know. I'm sure it'll all work out. A of effort. I think there is meant to be curves on the edges were the keel joins. But once again I've never built a boat .
I know. This video isn't the best editing wise. I've been trying to work on my editing skills. I now have a better editing software which should help with it.
Sorry but building a boat is a lot like building a house. The real work only begins after the walls and roof are finished. When you get the hull and deck completed, you're still a long way from floating your boat. And the use of Home Depot plywood and lumber over marine-grade materials, is the worst possible way to save money. If you're having fun that's one thing, but if you're dreaming of going boating, drop the hammer and go buy a boat. It's always a buyers market and never buy anything homemade.
I don't agree. I built a 15 foot Ross Lillistone First Mate sailboat with Menards plywood. And I've sailed on rough water from Lake Erie to Pamlico Sound and several small lakes in between. I trust it more than a production boat because I know exactly how it was built. It's my fourth sailboat, but first homebuilt and it's definitely my favorite. I'm even considering building another, bigger boat. Just follow the plans and you'll be fine. Have fun and get ready to tell everyone how you built your own sailboat - people are always amazed by that.
@@ssuntzu Yes, I'm a professional woodworker and I have undertaken serious boat building. Building small vessels can be fun but building bigger vessels is a waste of time and money. If fact most home-building boat projects, never see the sea. The ones that do are nearly impossible to resale. Banks won't loan money on them and insurance carriers won't underwrite them (especially if they're made of wood.) You're wrong about production boats too. When it comes to safety, Production boats are typically built to be nearly unsinkable, because boat owners are typically untrained, unlicensed and inexperienced. Builders know this and must design and build fail-safe products. Modern production boats (big and little) are virtually everywhere and easy to aquire. Because they're not made of wood but fibreglass, many thousands are still around from the 1970's and even 60's and just as good now as the day they were built. In fact (if for any reason) you can't seem to sell your "classic plastic" boat, you have two options...pay thousands to have it cut-up and deposited in the landfill or give it away. (You'd be surprised how many are just given away) I acquired a 30 sailboat this way, while turing-down a 52 footer! It's always a buyers market and the variety and condition of old boats is truly endless. I currently own a 40 foot sailboat which I paid $10,000 less than the asking price for (twenty years ago.) There's always a marina boat auction happening some place. Impounded but floating vessels are sold-off every few months. For less money than what it costs to buy boat-building materials, you can sail away. TH-cam is full of folks who have done just that and are now circumnavigating the world and bragging about it. Boat-building is fun but a professionally built boat can keep you alive to have fun. The things that amateurs don't know, can and does fill books. The ocean doesn't care if you've read any of those books or if you've used the best building materials, Home Depot has to offer.
Hard disagree. Can't be a waste of time if it's a hobby and he wants to spend his time doing it! You are clearly missing the point of what he's doing. He doesn't care about resale value, insurance, or other dumb concepts adults in suits make up. Quit raining on the parade! Also regular plywood is fine if the boat will live on a trailer in a dry climate (he's in southern CA). Even if sailed overnight there won't be enough time for much water intrusion, and it will be able to dry completely between uses. Furthermore in the resale market for a homemade kit boat of this type (very small, no ballast, unfaired centerboard & rudder, low SA/D, etc) the next buyer won't really care or know about marine ply anyway. Great job! Keep filming & show us the rest of the build!
@@scottbarth9578 You're talking to a person who has been down the boatbuilding road (more than once.) It will positively be an education. It can be fun but it's never a good idea. I'll spare you my sorry tale but it only ended up being a very time-consuming and expensive experience. Is it wrong to tell somebody the truth and maybe spare them some pain?
@@jamesbaldwin7676 How can you make a blanket statement like, "it's never a good idea?" Nothing would ever be built if that were true. I completely understand that people have different priorities, budgets, aptitudes, and amounts of free time. I agree that for the average person who wants to get out on the water, building a boat is a horrendous idea. However, he is already wrist deep in epoxy. Saying "don't do it" isn't going to spare him any pain. Would you have listened to your own advice the first time, and at that age?
jaja, die planung und der kauf des holzes...kauft kein nadel-sperrholz wie dieses...immer pappel oder sehr feine esche...sehrsehr-selten. pappel ist hochelastisch, nahezu splitterfrei. um effizient und leichter zu bauen, baute ich mein boot auf "gerüst" und stringer. dann passte ich die bordwände, den boden und am ende die kabinenwände an...zum schluss wurde der rumpf laminiert.
Vielen Dank für Ihren Kommentar. Als ich mit diesem Projekt begann, habe ich nicht genug recherchiert. Die Bauqualität des Bootes ist keineswegs die beste, aber ich habe auf dem Weg viel gelernt. Hoffentlich wird der nächste, den ich baue, viel besser sein.
@@JackWood25 richtig. auch hierbei ist ja der weg, also d konstruktion wichtig,,,als lernprozess. zur zeit hänge ich mit meinem hausbootbau fest,,,wenig zeit, wenig geld und niemand da der helfen möchte...liebe grüsse : jürgen
Really interested in what your building but your music is WAY-TOO-LOUD! Was trying to hear your commentary but had to keep the volume down because the music kept came booming in. Please have your voice above the music always so we can hear you.
I know that my voice is too quite. I don’t have a professional microphone for recording voice overs but I’ve figured out a solution for the next video.
@@JackWood25 Ok thanks for the reply; you’re a good orator and good at making it interesting and good at describing. So just try to keep closer to your mic to capture your consonants and really don’t be that concerned about modulating the volume up and down.
Makes our son look like the waste of oxygen he is. Good on you for doing something like this. Just a tip though (for video making, not boat building), get a better microphone and balance the volume of the music. I hate having to keep adjusting my volume.
Am sad that you know so little about wood. These plates you bought. Not suitable for boats. They are full of twigs. Plates for boats are without twigs. But no one told you. Your matterial choice. Not suitable for boats.
I know, but I didn't have enough at the time. Regular sheet plywood was the cheapest for me so I went with it. In the future, I'm planning on build a dinghy for the sailboat so I'll use marine grade plywood then.
Don’t worry. In the next few videos I seal all the seams on the interior with fiberglass strips and fully seal the exterior of the boat with 2 layers of fiberglass. The wood is just to get a sturdy frame.
I mean that harsh isn't needed but I feel you. Indeed the music volume is way too high and it's much too present (like that whistle flute synth and the brass/trumpets) just keep the music on the level you dim it to when narrating, and make the narration as loud as the music was now
Go check out my Instagram for my most recent adventures! - instagram.com/_jack_woood/
Pro tip. Using a couple of saw horses or even just garbage cans to place the plywood on while you mark out the curves would save your back. Don't be like the rest of us and only think about protecting our bodies until we are old and the damage is done. Great job on the boat!
Thanks for the tip! More vids are in the process
@@JackWood25 yet another person who commented before witching the video! @4:49
If you aren’t weak you don’t have to worry
@@1littlelee yet another troll
@@keptleroymg6877 Wait until you are old enough to understand the consequences
I heavily encourage this level of kid/friends hang out.. stay off the streets and out of trouble and build wholesome memories with the bois.. i just wish more kids would do projects like this and keep their personal lives off tiktok this project is looking insane for a group of kids that have never done this before. I’m working up the motivation to start working on my 38 foot neria ketch.. saved her from the crusher last year. Too much work to do by myself being injured but I’ll figure it out
Condescend much
@@Mahalo_83 if you find this condescending you might need professional help.. my rates are $42 an hour.. $50 if you need the couch
I hate tik tok. Its a stupid time waster. Me and a mates tryna build a Go kart with a chainsaw and stupidity. The two mix well
@@mikecorleone6797
Defiances life probably revolves and devolves around tik tok
@@Rufio1975 you’re probably right 😂 homeboy probably hasn’t seen a pair since nam
Randomly typed in how to build a boat from scratch, hope you succeed man, it will be worth it :)
well done young man. I often had dreams of doing such thing at your age but had neither the space or mainly drive to materialise them. You should be proud of yourself and i hope you had great fun with the boat.
It has truly been one hell of a ride.
Cheap plan, cheap ply, love it.
Just come across your channel seeing you have made another episode had to start back at ep 1 awesome build can’t wait to binge the rest
I am so inspired by you Bless Man . I know your family and love ones are so proud of each and everyone yall. Thank you for sharing your time, spending all that googobs of money to show us that how our ideas are capable of coming into existence right before our eyes . This is my 1st time to your channel. I'm glad I did watch it. Yall are a blessing working together and you explain thorough and comprehensible . Great job you captivated my attention. I give this video☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Great to see the younger generations being active outdoors, if you enjoy doing something it would not feel like a job in the future
Keep it up!!!
Thank you! More Vids are in the process
Just stumbled across your channel. While I'm not building a boat, I am restoring a 22 foot tanzer, the hull is solid, everything else needs to be rebuilt. The plan is to learn to sail on it, then sell it and move onto a 40 footer.
Best of luck with your project, you've gained a subscriber. Fair winds.
Awesome! Love hearing other people working on boat projects. Thanks for you comment!
Rebuild the Tanzer and forget about the 40er trust me I went small-Big-smaller and now have a Montgomery 17 that has sailed Florida Keys, Lake Erie, Fl-Bahamas and I’m contemplating taking it CA-Hawaii.
You will sink a ton of money into a 40’er and sail 1/4 as much as a smaller boat.
@@georgewashington7444 All fair and valid points. My eventual goal is to liveaboard, so some additional space is required. But for a vessel to sail and not live on permanently, you certainly can’t beat the 17-25 for range. I’m not in a huge hurry to upgrade though. I appreciate the comment.
Fair winds.
Great job jack .
Thank you!
I've watched all three of the boat building videos, can't wait to see the next one.
Looking forward to seeing your new boat
Good job Jack, look forward to seeing more!
Saya sangat bangga dengan adanya kreatifitas anak muda seperti ini🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
Well done. Thanks for sharing.
Awesome..! I’ll follow your progress.
Amazing!
You kicked off this build with the best apparel. Boat shoes
Dude, a young kid builds a boat... I'm going to watch!
Awesome work!
For future reference, when using gorilla glue dampen your work piece prior, so it will activate the glue. (It will foam up). Wipe the excess amount of foam a few times then let it set.
(That’s the proper way to use that particular gorilla glue. It’s meant to foam up and fill then harden. Not just dry set it and forget it)
Great work on the entire thing nonetheless!
Good job guys
I'm from Indonesia 🇮🇩
Can wait to see more, keep posting.Regards.
Great Job! Can you share this boat plain?
Profesional... i libo and admire Master🤩😍🥰🙇♂️🙇♂️🙇♂️
Love U ❤️
I just subsribed to see how this turns out! I can't wait for the next video!!!☺
Thank you! The next video is coming out this Saturday.
Great project, which I'm happy to subscribe to. Please
It would have been nice to know what design you chose for the build!
I’ll make that to share the design that I’m building in the next episode.
@@JackWood25
Can you fix your audio too please?
Nobody gonna mention how good looking he is? :P
Gj 💪💪
Im impressed
Thank you!
nice!
Sawhorse and a chalk line !
There are a hundred different ways to do this better or more efficiently.. none of which matter at all.. what matters is that you got stuck in and just did it when you could have been online playing games .. well done 👍.
This boat isn't perfect by any means but I've learned a lot along the way. Thanks for your comment.
thank you for not blaring a screaming saw or drill at me like most channels do i appreciate the music instead
I personally would not use lumber store plywood to build a boat today. Marine plywood exists for a reason. Great job though
Blah blah bla
nice boat can I ask your lay out of measuring of part.thanks
Two words that would have helped you tremendously with marking out the bulk-heads.
Chalk line.
indeed
I hope that is marine grade plywood
It's very much not (knot? :) ), but if it's for a fun learning experience, is glassed and epoxied, carefully maintained between outings, and doesn't spend too much time in the weather, it should last for a few years of fun... long enough to either get bored with the hobby, or to get a taste for what better to do for his next boat :)
Bonjour très bien beau boulot
Merci!
Very cool dude. I genuinely respect the hard work you put in.
Thank you! I I really appreciate it
Looking to build one for myself any chance you can share where you got your build plans?
Nice! I bought the plans over on duckworks.com. They have a ton of sailboat plans and other items.
@@JackWood25what model did you go with? Is there room to play with the dimensions?
Hi, can i ask u the size of each pannel that have you bought for this project? Are written in the plans when u have bought it? Thank u, great job!
Regarding the sheets of plywood, I bought 14, 4 foot by 8 foot sheets of plywood. I did buy plans as well but I share all this info in a future vid.
where did you get he plans? whats the name of that sailboat design?
@@sudamericanrockers6616 I purchased the plans from duckworks.com. They have a ton of different sailboat designs
I thought I was over the idea of owning a boat, but I rented a ~15 footer that is perfect, I want to build one just like it, but to my specs.
I highly encourage that you build your own. I've deviated from the plans and have started making my own modifications. Building your own boats really gives you the freedom to do what you want.
Do you have the plans for this
available on Duckworks duckworks.com/naut450-cutter-450-plans/
waiting for the part 3 ^_^
subcriber here
The video is finally complete. It'll be posted with early Saturday.
Can you link the plans in the description
Interesting! Which plans are those you used? Where to get them?
Marine-grade plywood uses a glue resistant to water, and although it is a bit more expensive compared to what HomeDepot sells, you are getting what you paid for.
Exactly. If I had a bigger budget, I would have definitely gone with marine grade plywood. You live and you learn.
Also depends on his final cover though. Entire fiberglass the thing, and no need to worry about the marine grade (all in all, not 100% though if you get what I’m saying)
@1:25 - Ya like, maybe a big slide projector (actually an overhead projector) and just trace. I am lazy.
Is that place on Rosecrans (Glen L Marine ?) still there? They sold plans and kits - back in the 60's -
Where did you get your plans?
I purchased them over on Duckworks.com.
Pro tip, dump music its like elevator musak. Increase narration volume.
This was an older video so my editing skills weren't the best. Currently working on it.
what boat are you building and where did you get the plans?
I bought the plans from duckworks.com. The boat that I'm building is called the Naut 450.
@@JackWood25Good job brother
Where did you get the blue print? Can I get it also?
The plans will be shared in the next video which is coming out this Saturday.
Great video. What plans did you use?
So these aren't my original plans, I purchased them from a website called duckworks.com. The type of boat that I'm building is called Naut 450.
Well done.
I am all for just going for it, and putting whatever you have On TH-cam. Enjoy watching any learning curve, and even more so doing something worthwile.
But i would enjoy it more, if you’d tinker a bit with your volume settings. The Music is really overshadowing everything, annoyingly even, as it really jumps up and Down.
But love to see the progress. 👍
Thank for your comment. I'm working of the volume. As of right now, I've purchased a better microphone for recording voice overs so my videos in the future should be better audio wise.
Do you have the plans for the boat available for purchase?
The plans for this boat aren't my original plans. If you want to purchase them, you can visit duckworks.com and find them there. The type of boat that I'm building is called the Naut 450.
Bro how could someone say they have no knowledge of boat building and go and draw custom schematics with a TI calculator!? Maybe it’s cause I’m from the Bronx and never had a woodworking class but damn it seems like you really know what you doing! I wish I knew how to do this 😢😢
Don’t be too hard on yourself. Besides he said he found the cheapest boat plans online in the beginning.
For my budget and type of boat that I wanted to build, I did find the cheapest plans. There a hundreds of free boat plans on the Internet, you just need to start searching. I didn't want to show off in the video but the calculations I made was just simple addition and subtraction. Also, I never took a woodworking class too. I just found other TH-cam videos that greatly helped. Anything is possible bro, you just have to start.
if u change blade on the jigsaw then the playwood wont splinter so much, take a blade with smaller teeth maby a higher quality brand, it says on the package. Just a hint..
Thanks for your feedback. In the next few videos, I do end up changing the blade and it made such a difference.
@@JackWood25 im gonna give you a other hint, when you do use epoxy for filling, please mix in some milled fiberglass fibers (u can take some matting and cut very fine pieces to) or microglass ballons or even normal wood sawdust, otherwise it can crack, epoxy is very strong but very brittle, like concrete without rebars. i wouldnt use plain epoxy or polyester more than 0,8mm thick without anything else in it.
hi Jack, can you share to me the template pattern. i want to build mine too. thanks
So I actually purchased the plans from Duckworks.com. I love this website and they have a ton of different boat designs and plans to buy.
The best wood for boats is white oak and or live oak
Great to know. Thanks for that info.
Do you have a link or info on what boat plans you are using?
I do. If you check out this link, it'll take you directly to the plans that I used. I did have to pay for them but if you look around, they have some pretty cool free boat plans. Link: duckworks.com/naut450-cutter-450-plans/
I'm worried you changed the plans. Plans are there for a reason. But what do I know. I'm sure it'll all work out. A of effort. I think there is meant to be curves on the edges were the keel joins. But once again I've never built a boat .
How much was the total cost for the entire thing
I will post a video regained all of the specifications.
You could just increase the mic volume for the handheld shots. It's really difficult to hear
watching this cuz dr stone
The fluctuating volume is certainly irritating. Hopefully you get that sorted out.
I think I have. I made this a while ago and my edition skills weren't the best. Hopefully they're better now.
Any updates????
Yes! I have a few but I'm working on more
Tại sao mấy anh không làm bằng tấm nhựa ppc
Hấp dẫn. Tôi chưa bao giờ nghe nói đến tấm nhựa ppc. Nghe có vẻ là một vật liệu thay thế tốt.
Hello, can you send me the dimensions of the boat?
The most important part of any boat is the designer, bad designer slow boat, no designer you guess it
One small criticism, dial down the music, it's too loud.
I know. This video isn't the best editing wise. I've been trying to work on my editing skills. I now have a better editing software which should help with it.
Why was the design wrong?
Sorry but building a boat is a lot like building a house. The real work only begins after the walls and roof are finished. When you get the hull and deck completed, you're still a long way from floating your boat.
And the use of Home Depot plywood and lumber over marine-grade materials, is the worst possible way to save money.
If you're having fun that's one thing, but if you're dreaming of going boating, drop the hammer and go buy a boat. It's always a buyers market and never buy anything homemade.
I don't agree. I built a 15 foot Ross Lillistone First Mate sailboat with Menards plywood. And I've sailed on rough water from Lake Erie to Pamlico Sound and several small lakes in between. I trust it more than a production boat because I know exactly how it was built. It's my fourth sailboat, but first homebuilt and it's definitely my favorite. I'm even considering building another, bigger boat.
Just follow the plans and you'll be fine. Have fun and get ready to tell everyone how you built your own sailboat - people are always amazed by that.
@@ssuntzu Yes, I'm a professional woodworker and I have undertaken serious boat building. Building small vessels can be fun but building bigger vessels is a waste of time and money. If fact most home-building boat projects, never see the sea. The ones that do are nearly impossible to resale. Banks won't loan money on them and insurance carriers won't underwrite them (especially if they're made of wood.)
You're wrong about production boats too. When it comes to safety, Production boats are typically built to be nearly unsinkable, because boat owners are typically untrained, unlicensed and inexperienced. Builders know this and must design and build fail-safe products.
Modern production boats (big and little) are virtually everywhere and easy to aquire. Because they're not made of wood but fibreglass, many thousands are still around from the 1970's and even 60's and just as good now as the day they were built. In fact (if for any reason) you can't seem to sell your "classic plastic" boat, you have two options...pay thousands to have it cut-up and deposited in the landfill or give it away. (You'd be surprised how many are just given away)
I acquired a 30 sailboat this way, while turing-down a 52 footer! It's always a buyers market and the variety and condition of old boats is truly endless. I currently own a 40 foot sailboat which I paid $10,000 less than the asking price for (twenty years ago.)
There's always a marina boat auction happening some place. Impounded but floating vessels are sold-off every few months. For less money than what it costs to buy boat-building materials, you can sail away. TH-cam is full of folks who have done just that and are now circumnavigating the world and bragging about it.
Boat-building is fun but a professionally built boat can keep you alive to have fun. The things that amateurs don't know, can and does fill books. The ocean doesn't care if you've read any of those books or if you've used the best building materials, Home Depot has to offer.
Hard disagree. Can't be a waste of time if it's a hobby and he wants to spend his time doing it! You are clearly missing the point of what he's doing. He doesn't care about resale value, insurance, or other dumb concepts adults in suits make up. Quit raining on the parade!
Also regular plywood is fine if the boat will live on a trailer in a dry climate (he's in southern CA). Even if sailed overnight there won't be enough time for much water intrusion, and it will be able to dry completely between uses.
Furthermore in the resale market for a homemade kit boat of this type (very small, no ballast, unfaired centerboard & rudder, low SA/D, etc) the next buyer won't really care or know about marine ply anyway.
Great job! Keep filming & show us the rest of the build!
@@scottbarth9578 You're talking to a person who has been down the boatbuilding road (more than once.) It will positively be an education. It can be fun but it's never a good idea. I'll spare you my sorry tale but it only ended up being a very time-consuming and expensive experience. Is it wrong to tell somebody the truth and maybe spare them some pain?
@@jamesbaldwin7676 How can you make a blanket statement like, "it's never a good idea?" Nothing would ever be built if that were true.
I completely understand that people have different priorities, budgets, aptitudes, and amounts of free time.
I agree that for the average person who wants to get out on the water, building a boat is a horrendous idea. However, he is already wrist deep in epoxy. Saying "don't do it" isn't going to spare him any pain.
Would you have listened to your own advice the first time, and at that age?
당신은 힘이센가같다
감사합니다! 아직 완료해야 할 작업이 많이 있습니다.
all the plan measurements for the bottom were completely off? hmm.
jaja, die planung und der kauf des holzes...kauft kein nadel-sperrholz wie dieses...immer pappel oder sehr feine esche...sehrsehr-selten. pappel ist hochelastisch, nahezu splitterfrei.
um effizient und leichter zu bauen, baute ich mein boot auf "gerüst" und stringer. dann passte ich die bordwände, den boden und am ende die kabinenwände an...zum schluss wurde der rumpf laminiert.
Vielen Dank für Ihren Kommentar. Als ich mit diesem Projekt begann, habe ich nicht genug recherchiert. Die Bauqualität des Bootes ist keineswegs die beste, aber ich habe auf dem Weg viel gelernt. Hoffentlich wird der nächste, den ich baue, viel besser sein.
@@JackWood25 richtig. auch hierbei ist ja der weg, also d konstruktion wichtig,,,als lernprozess.
zur zeit hänge ich mit meinem hausbootbau fest,,,wenig zeit, wenig geld und niemand da der helfen möchte...liebe grüsse : jürgen
The music is very loud
I know. My editing for this videos isn't the best. I'm trying to get better.
music if FARRRR too loud!
I know sorry. I filmed and edited this video on my phone and at the time, my editing skills were not the best.
nice content, but music too loud voice too soft. cant hear your comments
SCRACTH ?
Pretty much, yeah. This is a home depot boat build.
Really interested in what your building but your music is WAY-TOO-LOUD! Was trying to hear your commentary but had to keep the volume down because the music kept came booming in. Please have your voice above the music always so we can hear you.
I know that my voice is too quite. I don’t have a professional microphone for recording voice overs but I’ve figured out a solution for the next video.
@@JackWood25 Ok thanks for the reply; you’re a good orator and good at making it interesting and good at describing. So just try to keep closer to your mic to capture your consonants and really don’t be that concerned about modulating the volume up and down.
6:12 big mistake, it has zero structural strenght 🤷♂️
It has been reinforced with epoxy resin and fiberglass.
music is too loud over his voice
Sorry about that. This video isn't the best editing wise. I'm trying to improve this.
Makes our son look like the waste of oxygen he is.
Good on you for doing something like this.
Just a tip though (for video making, not boat building), get a better microphone and balance the volume of the music. I hate having to keep adjusting my volume.
Good morning, I'm Rodrigö, I live in Brazil on the beach, would you be able to donate me the plans to build my house, my dream of freedom, thank you
Am sad that you know so little about wood. These plates you bought. Not suitable for boats. They are full of twigs. Plates for boats are without twigs. But no one told you. Your matterial choice. Not suitable for boats.
Hi, can you send me the project of this yacht by e-mail, please
So the plans aren't mine. I purchased them from a website. If you're interested in them though, here's a link: duckworks.com/naut450-cutter-450-plans/
Ditch the music. Too distracting.
Dem Herrn Oberst für das Gespräch zu danken und sich zu verabschieden ist wohl nicht mehr nötig....Ganz schlechter Stiel....
OMG so many stupid Boomer comments here I can't even...
Wrong, you rather should buy a marine grade plywood.
I know, but I didn't have enough at the time. Regular sheet plywood was the cheapest for me so I went with it. In the future, I'm planning on build a dinghy for the sailboat so I'll use marine grade plywood then.
Step 1: USE FIBERGLASS, NOT WOOD.
Don’t worry. In the next few videos I seal all the seams on the interior with fiberglass strips and fully seal the exterior of the boat with 2 layers of fiberglass. The wood is just to get a sturdy frame.
Make yourself some proper work horses and stop working on the ground
Seriously ? you want to spend so much time building a real boat with such crappy materials ?
Yup.
Why in the *#&% do you have music playing in this video?????? Bad move.
If it's a bad move then don't watch it.
Is the AIDS inducing music necessary?
I’m sorry but I don’t really understand your comment
@@JackWood25 In simple terms then, the music you use is shit. Does that explain it?
I mean that harsh isn't needed but I feel you. Indeed the music volume is way too high and it's much too present (like that whistle flute synth and the brass/trumpets) just keep the music on the level you dim it to when narrating, and make the narration as loud as the music was now
Je m’abonne à ta chaîne
Merci beaucoup!