Im so glad I found your channel, the interaction between you two is magical as are your creations. Best regards - stay safe and we'll see you next week
Cameron has been working with me full time during the Summers since he was 5, we work well together for sure.. It's been really fun to take on a project that we have always talked about doing and appreciate you taking the time to watch! Thanks so much for watching and for the feedback!
Great job guys! Great watching you both overcome issues as they come up. She is going to be a beauty. Makes me a bit sad that I was not able to do this kind of build with my grandfather who had built quite a few boats like this before he passed.
Thanks! It seems every part of this build we are running into head scratchers without a doubt! I hope to be building boats when I am older like your grandfather, would love to be able to spend every day on it. My Dad passed three years ago and I wish he could see the boat and progress! The timing doesn't work out for all for sure, hopefully you still have at least one of the boats he built in your family?
Really enjoying these videos! What a great project to work together on - it’s got me looking at plans for the Malahini. Can’t wait to see the finished boat!
Thanks so much for watching and for the feedback, I spent 2 years off and on going on the website and looking at the plans, I just kept coming back to the Malahini for a decent size first boat that we could pull off. At first it was the Zip and I kept seeing many people saying they wished the had went Malahini as it is larger. This boat will primarily be Camerons I suspect and it should be a perfect size for him to play around with his friends at the lake. Should go around 40mph
When you were planing in that dashboard, I would have tacked a piece of 1/8 -1/4" plywood to the top of the forward frame and roughed it out with a Japanese pull saw first. Then come in with the plane to finish the job. If you had a power plane I would have worked to rough it down and then finish with your had plane also. Saves a lot of work. That said the boat is really shaping up nice.
That's the method I did for the transom when the boat was flipped over in Episode 2, it works great. I was using the power plane and I had a 1/4 in place for insurance. I would of preferred to use a Japanese pull saw on our notches but we had a ton of snow and neither one of us wanted to go out to the van and get it out. If it was just me I would of for sure not planed it from the start but I could for sure tell he was wanting the challenge so I thought go for it! Thanks for watching and following along!
Looks good guys, well done. Hey will you consider placing glass/epoxy on the inside seems such as the bow which is under tension etc to make it bullet proof
Thanks so much! I am sure it would benefit but at this point after glassing the entire outside, I have had enough of the fiberglass process for now. If it was going to be a salt water boat, I think I would consider more. Note that once we went through the bending process and the wood dried in that position, it was much less pressure on it.
Your boat looks to be exactly like my Glen-L Outrage. My motor well was a head scratcher as well. My Outrage called for a 4”x8” horizontal beam epoxied and screwed to the transom that the motor well rested on. The beam with the transom knee allowed up to a 120 hp motor. I had an 80 hp. The Outrage is 16’ long. How long is your boat? Ya’ll are doing an excellent job .
So glad to get that motor well framed out, I am seeing a cycle of being stuck figuring something out, we get past it then we are investigating and figuring out something else! It never ends but it's a fun puzzle. I believe mine is just under 16' there was an option to extend it by 1' but I was hesitant because it would require me to adjust a lot through out the build. We did move the dash forward about 6" to get more interior room however. We plan on getting a 60hp currently. Thanks so much for watching!
11 วันที่ผ่านมา
There is an amazing simple tool for odd angles. It's called joggle stick. Check it out. It speeds up weird notch cutouts by a factor of 3 by using a sketch lines on a waste material.
@@fultonfinewoodworks I have my dad's engineer's ruler from 1948. I gave my son an ancient set of scribing points when he entered the trades. He's so sentimental he'll never use it 😆. He mostly does custom showers now. I did custom wood furniture. It's nice to see your son take it up. 👍
I had to go back and see what you were seeing and I then could not see it! It's actually an optical illusion, when we painted the bilge paint on the floor we didn't have a brush to cut in, only a roller, so we stopped shy of the frame. It looks like a light crack now.
In the first video we cover the cradle we made for the boat, it's contoured to support the boat fully across the bottom so I am not concerned about the weight. We hope to get at minimum a temp floor in this week to make it easer to move around.
I investigated that early on and quickly found the only feasible type of boat to be electric right now is a pontoon style boat due to the massive storage space needed the batteries. We just aren't there yet for electric power options when you want to have some range.
Looking good!
Thanks!
Im so glad I found your channel, the interaction between you two is magical as are your creations.
Best regards - stay safe and we'll see you next week
Cameron has been working with me full time during the Summers since he was 5, we work well together for sure.. It's been really fun to take on a project that we have always talked about doing and appreciate you taking the time to watch! Thanks so much for watching and for the feedback!
Great job guys! Great watching you both overcome issues as they come up. She is going to be a beauty. Makes me a bit sad that I was not able to do this kind of build with my grandfather who had built quite a few boats like this before he passed.
Thanks! It seems every part of this build we are running into head scratchers without a doubt! I hope to be building boats when I am older like your grandfather, would love to be able to spend every day on it. My Dad passed three years ago and I wish he could see the boat and progress! The timing doesn't work out for all for sure, hopefully you still have at least one of the boats he built in your family?
Really enjoying these videos! What a great project to work together on - it’s got me looking at plans for the Malahini. Can’t wait to see the finished boat!
Thanks so much for watching and for the feedback, I spent 2 years off and on going on the website and looking at the plans, I just kept coming back to the Malahini for a decent size first boat that we could pull off. At first it was the Zip and I kept seeing many people saying they wished the had went Malahini as it is larger. This boat will primarily be Camerons I suspect and it should be a perfect size for him to play around with his friends at the lake. Should go around 40mph
Whoooo!!! Waiting all week for this!
Thanks for watching!
When you were planing in that dashboard, I would have tacked a piece of 1/8 -1/4" plywood to the top of the forward frame and roughed it out with a Japanese pull saw first. Then come in with the plane to finish the job. If you had a power plane I would have worked to rough it down and then finish with your had plane also. Saves a lot of work. That said the boat is really shaping up nice.
That's the method I did for the transom when the boat was flipped over in Episode 2, it works great. I was using the power plane and I had a 1/4 in place for insurance. I would of preferred to use a Japanese pull saw on our notches but we had a ton of snow and neither one of us wanted to go out to the van and get it out. If it was just me I would of for sure not planed it from the start but I could for sure tell he was wanting the challenge so I thought go for it! Thanks for watching and following along!
Looks good guys, well done. Hey will you consider placing glass/epoxy on the inside seems such as the bow which is under tension etc to make it bullet proof
Thanks so much! I am sure it would benefit but at this point after glassing the entire outside, I have had enough of the fiberglass process for now. If it was going to be a salt water boat, I think I would consider more. Note that once we went through the bending process and the wood dried in that position, it was much less pressure on it.
Your boat looks to be exactly like my Glen-L Outrage. My motor well was a head scratcher as well. My Outrage called for a 4”x8” horizontal beam epoxied and screwed to the transom that the motor well rested on. The beam with the transom knee allowed up to a 120 hp motor. I had an 80 hp. The Outrage is 16’ long. How long is your boat? Ya’ll are doing an excellent job .
So glad to get that motor well framed out, I am seeing a cycle of being stuck figuring something out, we get past it then we are investigating and figuring out something else! It never ends but it's a fun puzzle. I believe mine is just under 16' there was an option to extend it by 1' but I was hesitant because it would require me to adjust a lot through out the build. We did move the dash forward about 6" to get more interior room however. We plan on getting a 60hp currently. Thanks so much for watching!
There is an amazing simple tool for odd angles. It's called joggle stick. Check it out. It speeds up weird notch cutouts by a factor of 3 by using a sketch lines on a waste material.
It could be a good idea to put a solid piece of brass plat to fit over the bough we’re the mother will be fitted.
We plan on installing what I think is called a polished cut water on the front bow if that is what you are referring to?
9:57 I've had that very same compass for over 30 years.
I am not sure why, but that's something that is hard to lose unlike things like tape measures or pencils. I have had mine forever as well!
@@fultonfinewoodworks I have my dad's engineer's ruler from 1948. I gave my son an ancient set of scribing points when he entered the trades. He's so sentimental he'll never use it 😆. He mostly does custom showers now. I did custom wood furniture. It's nice to see your son take it up. 👍
I would not challenge that boy to arm wrestling after all that plane work he is accomplishing
It's for sure a work out!
👍👍👍
Thanks so much for watching, glad you liked it! More to come!
Why is there a gap between the floor of the well and just behind the seat?
I had to go back and see what you were seeing and I then could not see it! It's actually an optical illusion, when we painted the bilge paint on the floor we didn't have a brush to cut in, only a roller, so we stopped shy of the frame. It looks like a light crack now.
Hey, Tom de S.
Tommy is starting to get a big cat head from all the fans!
Why are you standing on the plywood between the frames.
In the first video we cover the cradle we made for the boat, it's contoured to support the boat fully across the bottom so I am not concerned about the weight. We hope to get at minimum a temp floor in this week to make it easer to move around.
Excellent🛥⚓👏👏👏💯
Thanks for watching!
Why not fit an electric motor, a lot safer, no petrol fumes
I investigated that early on and quickly found the only feasible type of boat to be electric right now is a pontoon style boat due to the massive storage space needed the batteries. We just aren't there yet for electric power options when you want to have some range.