Hi guys. The idea of having a little sail on your foldaway dinghy is a great idea. A nice alternative to the buzzing noise of an outboard (unless its electric). I feel your pain selling your previous boat. They really become a part of the family. Especially when you have had worked hard on them and had special moments on them. Thats probably why we now have 3 boats and cant bear to part with any of them and we still havent got our ideal sized (final!) boat with a drop keel and which is 38-39 foot. People call me a bit random and mad. I think I've met my match. :) Keep the videos coming . We love them. :)
Hi David, you guys could have a family flotilla. :-) Thanks for your comment we really appreciate people taking the time to thank us for our videos. Fair winds, Chris 👍
Wow! I have a 14 foot aluminum fishing boat (row boat) and I have been wanting to make it a sailboat but have not known the things you taught me here. Thank you so much! Well done, very well explained. I appreciate it!
About your copper stopper...copper and aluminum touching will act as battery terminals and produce galvanic corrosion, especially when wet with salty sea water/spray. Would same size aluminum tubing work as an alternate stopper?
Very creative use of ordinary, easily available bits to make your sailing rig! Great job Chris! It is interesting to watch you come up with ways to get things done - without spending a lot on “marine” hardware. Never would have thought to use a turnbuckle to get two cheap eye bolts! Wow! Thanks for another great video.
Hi there! Thank you :-) Yes, it did seem strange that the stainless steel turnbuckle cost less than two eye bolts of the same dimensions but that's how it was in the shop I visited. As long as you remember that one has a left-hand thread and one a right-hand thread, there's no difference. I also made DIY rowlocks out of 'turnbuckle eye bolts' after seeing how ridiculously expensive commercial rowlocks are ( a loop of line goes through the eye and holds the oar, allowing full range of movement). They worked great too... Fair winds! Chris 👍
Thanks for the wonderful video and ideas. I just picked up a little 13 foot sailboat without the mast, boom, rigging, and sail. Iwas thinking of making my own. Now I know I can do it. Nothing fancy, but functional. Thanks for the inspiration.
Ingenious as always Chris. I enjoyed the RAF slang at 21:14 -- not heard that in decades! I think it's originally an expression used by the Fish Heads, so very appropriate here ;-)
It’s super handy: it cuts and can be sanded to shape easily, takes a tap very well and can be heated and bent if a non-flat shape is required. Cheers, Chris 👍
Do you want to know how we built our homemade folding tender? (8 foot boat which folds down to 4 inches wide, rows, sails and planes with an outboard engine!) Watch this video: th-cam.com/video/g4sD0ownveI/w-d-xo.html
What no Emma? Hope mom and daughter are having a nice nap. Chris I continue to impress me on your engineering skills. To look at a cooper pipe and make a jam cleat or make your own storm sail. Good job well done safe travel.
Hi Tom, this was filmed last year on our old boat (We still have lots of footage to edit from that but we are really struggling with the time it takes!). Thank you for your comment. :-) Fair winds, Chris 👍
Excellent videos, Chris. I am thinking strongly about building one of these boats. I think I saw where you thought the 6 ft. Version was perhaps better. Would your sailing rig work for that? I was sorry to see the inflatable tender on your new boat. The foldable wooden boat certainly takes up less space than an inflatable boat. I purchased a cheap inflatable boat, but it doesn't row very well in a straight line. I think the wooden boat would be better, and with the addition of a sailing rig, would be easier to control. In addition to the cost of a motor here in North Carolina, they want to tax you for a powered tender. I would be interested in your comparison between the inflatable and the Origami wooden boat. Thanks again, Bob Foster
One question, but first great video love them all. Does the copper stoppers cut into the lines when you use them? Seems like they would cut thru the lines like a pair of scissors after a bit. Just curious.
Great video. Many thanks for for sharing. I've also used cutting board for various things that it wasn't intended for. The only hassle I have had is its lifetime when out in the sun. Perhaps it's worse here in Australia but the board didn't last all that long.
Bravo. Don’t be discouraged that your tinker and productivity time come to a painfully slow pace now with the kiddo. Just the next stage in life👍. In several years she’ll be coming up with problems for you to overcome and McGyver will return😁👊.
Thanks guys! I'm sure Valerio would love being the captain of a sailing dinghy. Maybe you can build a rig together as a family one day... Buon Vento! Chris 👍
I'm trying to find the image of the tender with all the terminology listed. Where is that? I wish to screen capture it because I do not know all the names of the parts.
Hi Joseph, I didn't want to sell it but it was a deal breaker... The guy who bought our boat really wanted the dinghy too. We sold this boat for more than we paid for her (even including all refit maintenance costs), aafter 4.5 years of use, so decided it was worth letting the dinghy go knowing that I can make another one one day if I want... Cheers, Chris
Very interesting Chris, kind of like a small glimpse into the mind of madness. 😀 I like your approach to problem solving with the results being imaginative and functional. Is there anything you would have done differently given the opportunity to build this setup again in the future? The first sailboat I ever owned was built by my father, two uncles and myself. Selling it felt like losing my first love and I cried like baby when the new owner came to pick it up. I was heartbroken even though I had outgrown it and moved onto a bigger and much better sailboat. It is odd how people can become so emotionally attached to an inanimate object.
Building a boat with your family like that is something very special indeed and I can imagine that it takes the pain of selling it to the next level. It is weird how you can become so attached to a boat, but I guess it's the priceless memories you make and associate with them... What would I do differently? Good question. Before Emma I'd have built the 6 foot version as the usable space inside these boats is huge and we didn't need such a big tender for our use. To be honest I think even with Emma I'd probably go for the 6 foot version but no doubt there would be times when I'd miss the extra couple of foot LOA. The rudder I would build more simply and lighter weight. If I had the time to dedicate to it I would build a foiling version, but that would take a lot of faffing about and I really do not have the time for that kind of shenanigan at the moment... (Maybe when I'm 80 years old and things have calmed down a bit!) I'd probably buy a standard optimist sail rather than the school sleeve version as this would be more versatile and could even be employed as a riding sail for when the main boat is at anchor. That's about it I think. I loved this little tender and I hope to bump into it out there on the big wide blue some day. Fair winds! Chris 👍
It is sad to see the tender you built going and it will be interesting to see if you build another for your new sailboat. The rudder was well engineered for a 4m sailboat but, as you already know, overkill for a 6 foot tender. I am not sure you would realize much benefit from a foil design when used on a tender of that size. I would have loved to take her for a spin around the harbor as I imagine it was a lot of fun. Not too many people can say their tender is actually fun to use. I have a Porta-Bote that has served me well although I cannot think of a time when I have had any fun with it. I have saved the link to the plans for the tender you built and will definitely consider it when the Porta-Bote goes to a watery grave. A fraction of the cost and a lot more fun is always good in my book. Take care.
Cutting boards are "ace" ha ha ha , not heard the word ace for years, not since kicking about on a bmx when erasure were cool ha ha ha .I am very very new to sailing and find your videos enlightening, informative and interesting. I need some sailing experience lessons from a more common sense approach. Would you be interested in having a second mate to show me the ropes for a week. I'm based in the uk but I'm a tight arsed civil engineer originally from Chorley, lancs whose semi retired(in my early forties) so very few restrictions on when and where .
Hi Jason, cutting boards are ace! As are BMX bikes, Spectrum ZX 48ks, and a proper game of football where everyone gets kicked and rammed into and nobody rolls around on the floor like a ballerina! Those were the days eh?... We started sailing relatively late too but it's very easy to pick it up. You can learn to sail in a couple of days [then spend every day for the rest of your life working to improve and learn more, without ever achieving perfection...] so it's really quite easy to get started. We offer crew opportunities to our Patrons, who pledge $1 or more per video, so you might like to check out our Patreon page (patreon.com/sailingbritaly) Chorley is not far from my neck of the woods (Sunny Blackpool). There is a marina in Preston so there are also sailing opportunities there. Fair winds! Chris 👍
Hi Patrick! Don't worry: this video was recorded last year (hence the new father puffy eyes!) this was our old boat, which we sold and is now sailing around the beautiful island or Sardinia with her new owner... Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊
Hi guys. The idea of having a little sail on your foldaway dinghy is a great idea. A nice alternative to the buzzing noise of an outboard (unless its electric). I feel your pain selling your previous boat. They really become a part of the family. Especially when you have had worked hard on them and had special moments on them. Thats probably why we now have 3 boats and cant bear to part with any of them and we still havent got our ideal sized (final!) boat with a drop keel and which is 38-39 foot. People call me a bit random and mad. I think I've met my match. :) Keep the videos coming . We love them. :)
Hi David, you guys could have a family flotilla. :-) Thanks for your comment we really appreciate people taking the time to thank us for our videos. Fair winds, Chris 👍
Wow! I have a 14 foot aluminum fishing boat (row boat) and I have been wanting to make it a sailboat but have not known the things you taught me here. Thank you so much! Well done, very well explained. I appreciate it!
About your copper stopper...copper and aluminum touching will act as battery terminals and produce galvanic corrosion, especially when wet with salty sea water/spray.
Would same size aluminum tubing work as an alternate stopper?
Stopper by itself is worth the price of admission for this video!
Thank you :-)
Thanks from Eastern NC USA! Great video. Now time to start my own project. Thanks for the inspiration and instruction.
My pleasure James (missed this comment!) Cheers, Chris
Very creative use of ordinary, easily available bits to make your sailing rig! Great job Chris! It is interesting to watch you come up with ways to get things done - without spending a lot on “marine” hardware. Never would have thought to use a turnbuckle to get two cheap eye bolts! Wow! Thanks for another great video.
Hi there! Thank you :-) Yes, it did seem strange that the stainless steel turnbuckle cost less than two eye bolts of the same dimensions but that's how it was in the shop I visited. As long as you remember that one has a left-hand thread and one a right-hand thread, there's no difference. I also made DIY rowlocks out of 'turnbuckle eye bolts' after seeing how ridiculously expensive commercial rowlocks are ( a loop of line goes through the eye and holds the oar, allowing full range of movement). They worked great too... Fair winds! Chris 👍
this design is a wealth of brilliant ideas ....my compliments
Benjy’s plans are superb - my rig, leeboard and rudder were just a thrown together experiment, but it all worked out well in the end. Cheers, Chris 👍
Thanks for the wonderful video and ideas. I just picked up a little 13 foot sailboat without the mast, boom, rigging, and sail. Iwas thinking of making my own. Now I know I can do it. Nothing fancy, but functional.
Thanks for the inspiration.
My pleasure James! Subscribe & hit the bell for more helpful videos from us. Good luck with your boat work!⛵️Cheers, Chris 👍
Ingenious as always Chris. I enjoyed the RAF slang at 21:14 -- not heard that in decades! I think it's originally an expression used by the Fish Heads, so very appropriate here ;-)
Hi Stephen, it's funny to hear Rossella come out with words like this that she's picked up from me over the years... :-) Fair winds, Chris 👍
Cutting board... brilliant! I'll be using that on my sailing canoe!
It’s super handy: it cuts and can be sanded to shape easily, takes a tap very well and can be heated and bent if a non-flat shape is required. Cheers, Chris 👍
Great vid. Would have liked to see how all the rig was fitted to the tender.Thks
Do you want to know how we built our homemade folding tender? (8 foot boat which folds down to 4 inches wide, rows, sails and planes with an outboard engine!) Watch this video: th-cam.com/video/g4sD0ownveI/w-d-xo.html
Great little rig and some brill ideas. Agree about chopping boards....so useful. Andy UK
Thanks Andy! You can never have too many chopping boards... :-) Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊
The English Magyver. Your also a good teacher like Mads on sail life, out of Denmark
Tak! (Danish for thank you...) Chris 👍
Thanks for video. Would be nice to see how it really works on a boat.
Terrific. I'm going to build my first sail dingy It's going to be 11 ft by 5'6" beam. I'll be using your ideas! Thank you for blazing the trail!
Cool . I'm thinking of doing it to my 16' fishing boat to save fuel . Thanks for the heads up .
Absolutely brilliant! Thank you for sharing!
🙏👍
Awesomeness I’m going to try!
Very clever work on the rig. Thank you for sharing what you did and why. Thank you for another excellent video :)
Thank you Jeffrey! Cheers, Chris 👍
Great job mate..weldone
would love to see your „storm sail“ in action! really like such improvised but well working stuff!
Thank you! We sold this dinghy with our previous boat but there will be another one on the way when I can find the tine to build it... Cheers, Chris 👍
Very nice, friend! Shoutout from Brasil :)
What no Emma? Hope mom and daughter are having a nice nap. Chris I continue to impress me on your engineering skills.
To look at a cooper pipe and make a jam cleat or make your own storm sail. Good job well done safe travel.
Hi Tom, this was filmed last year on our old boat (We still have lots of footage to edit from that but we are really struggling with the time it takes!). Thank you for your comment. :-) Fair winds, Chris 👍
Amazing! I have a 9 foot huon pine dinghy that I'd like to convert. Inspiring stuff! Thanks. Alan
Thanks, will be using a few of these ideas
My pleasure! 👍
the rudder is perfect for a giant dinghy, or your yacht -)
thank you !! only the leeboard bit for me ;
great simple design .. building a kite boat !! ; cheers
Nice one Gordon, enjoy! 🌅👍
I needed a sail for my skate board thanks ⭐
Nice one Maya, a sail powered bicycle is on my "things to do if I ever get the chance one day" list. Good luck with your skate board! 😉
Great video Chris 👍😊
Thank you Garreth! 👍
Great information of a DIY project.
Thank you! Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊
More amazing work!
Thank you! Chris 👍
Genius! Thank You for Sharing
Thank you Robert 🙏
Excellent videos, Chris.
I am thinking strongly about building one of these boats. I think I saw where you thought the 6 ft. Version was perhaps better. Would your sailing rig work for that? I was sorry to see the inflatable tender on your new boat. The foldable wooden boat certainly takes up less space than an inflatable boat. I purchased a cheap inflatable boat, but it doesn't row very well in a straight line. I think the wooden boat would be better, and with the addition of a sailing rig, would be easier to control. In addition to the cost of a motor here in North Carolina, they want to tax you for a powered tender. I would be interested in your comparison between the inflatable and the Origami wooden boat. Thanks again, Bob Foster
One question, but first great video love them all. Does the copper stoppers cut into the lines when you use them? Seems like they would cut thru the lines like a pair of scissors after a bit. Just curious.
Hi Ed, thank you 👍 I found them to be pretty good actually. You do have to deburr all of the edges though, inside and out. Fair winds, Chris
Brilliant!
Cheers Jeremy 👍
Awesome video Chris! Your DIY skills always blow me away :-D
Now living in the USA, I love to listen to your British accent ;-)
Antonio (wannabe DIY)
Hi Antonio, thank you very much! 😊 Fair winds, Chris 👍
Thank you so very much for this!
You’re very welcome! Chris 👍
What glue did you use to attach the nylon mats cap to the mast?
You are a genius thank you
Great video. Many thanks for for sharing. I've also used cutting board for various things that it wasn't intended for. The only hassle I have had is its lifetime when out in the sun. Perhaps it's worse here in Australia but the board didn't last all that long.
Hi Brad, thank you for your comment and for the heads up with the UV resistance issue. Cheers, Chris 👍
Bravo. Don’t be discouraged that your tinker and productivity time come to a painfully slow pace now with the kiddo. Just the next stage in life👍. In several years she’ll be coming up with problems for you to overcome and McGyver will return😁👊.
👍
cool video mate
Thank you Alsino! Fair winds, Chris 👍
You re always super!we d like to do it for Valerio!!
Thanks guys! I'm sure Valerio would love being the captain of a sailing dinghy. Maybe you can build a rig together as a family one day... Buon Vento! Chris 👍
Automatic Liked 👍 very close to 10k subs 🍻
Thank you very much! Hopefully we'll hit the magic 10k soon! 🍻👍
I'm trying to find the image of the tender with all the terminology listed. Where is that? I wish to screen capture it because I do not know all the names of the parts.
Why did you sell the folding dinghy with the boat? Seemed like you really liked it
Hi Joseph, I didn't want to sell it but it was a deal breaker... The guy who bought our boat really wanted the dinghy too. We sold this boat for more than we paid for her (even including all refit maintenance costs), aafter 4.5 years of use, so decided it was worth letting the dinghy go knowing that I can make another one one day if I want... Cheers, Chris
Very interesting Chris, kind of like a small glimpse into the mind of madness. 😀 I like your approach to problem solving with the results being imaginative and functional. Is there anything you would have done differently given the opportunity to build this setup again in the future?
The first sailboat I ever owned was built by my father, two uncles and myself. Selling it felt like losing my first love and I cried like baby when the new owner came to pick it up. I was heartbroken even though I had outgrown it and moved onto a bigger and much better sailboat. It is odd how people can become so emotionally attached to an inanimate object.
Building a boat with your family like that is something very special indeed and I can imagine that it takes the pain of selling it to the next level. It is weird how you can become so attached to a boat, but I guess it's the priceless memories you make and associate with them...
What would I do differently? Good question. Before Emma I'd have built the 6 foot version as the usable space inside these boats is huge and we didn't need such a big tender for our use. To be honest I think even with Emma I'd probably go for the 6 foot version but no doubt there would be times when I'd miss the extra couple of foot LOA.
The rudder I would build more simply and lighter weight. If I had the time to dedicate to it I would build a foiling version, but that would take a lot of faffing about and I really do not have the time for that kind of shenanigan at the moment... (Maybe when I'm 80 years old and things have calmed down a bit!)
I'd probably buy a standard optimist sail rather than the school sleeve version as this would be more versatile and could even be employed as a riding sail for when the main boat is at anchor.
That's about it I think. I loved this little tender and I hope to bump into it out there on the big wide blue some day.
Fair winds!
Chris 👍
It is sad to see the tender you built going and it will be interesting to see if you build another for your new sailboat. The rudder was well engineered for a 4m sailboat but, as you already know, overkill for a 6 foot tender. I am not sure you would realize much benefit from a foil design when used on a tender of that size. I would have loved to take her for a spin around the harbor as I imagine it was a lot of fun. Not too many people can say their tender is actually fun to use. I have a Porta-Bote that has served me well although I cannot think of a time when I have had any fun with it. I have saved the link to the plans for the tender you built and will definitely consider it when the Porta-Bote goes to a watery grave. A fraction of the cost and a lot more fun is always good in my book. Take care.
👍
Sailing Macgyver, well done.
Thanks! 👍
@ Lk M
"The English McGyver" Like it, good one.
Congrats
🙏
great!
Cheers James ⛵️👍
Cheers!
Pleasure! 👍
Superb we have enjoyed every minute, kisses for Emma
Thank you Iwona. Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊
Job done ..... just shows you, you don't have to go buy an expensive rig.
Nice DIY Chris, your official last name is now McGyver ..
Hi Larry! I must admit I've been called that many times (even by an Italian, which was very surprising!) Thanks for watching. :-) Fair winds, Chris 👍
Cutting boards are "ace" ha ha ha , not heard the word ace for years, not since kicking about on a bmx when erasure were cool ha ha ha .I am very very new to sailing and find your videos enlightening, informative and interesting. I need some sailing experience lessons from a more common sense approach. Would you be interested in having a second mate to show me the ropes for a week. I'm based in the uk but I'm a tight arsed civil engineer originally from Chorley, lancs whose semi retired(in my early forties) so very few restrictions on when and where .
Hi Jason, cutting boards are ace! As are BMX bikes, Spectrum ZX 48ks, and a proper game of football where everyone gets kicked and rammed into and nobody rolls around on the floor like a ballerina! Those were the days eh?... We started sailing relatively late too but it's very easy to pick it up. You can learn to sail in a couple of days [then spend every day for the rest of your life working to improve and learn more, without ever achieving perfection...] so it's really quite easy to get started. We offer crew opportunities to our Patrons, who pledge $1 or more per video, so you might like to check out our Patreon page (patreon.com/sailingbritaly) Chorley is not far from my neck of the woods (Sunny Blackpool). There is a marina in Preston so there are also sailing opportunities there. Fair winds! Chris 👍
Cheap - 115 USD ....thats got to be a typo right? 6082 48mm x 4mm x 3m 15-20 GBP
الله اكبر
wooden Dowel (little wooden thing lol)
My brain was just not working! (😴)
I am so "stealing" some of these ideas
That's why I made the video! Happy building and fair winds, Chris 👍
Wooden Bung.
:-)
Im A PHONE? 😢
Did you just say your are selling your boat???? :(
Hi Patrick! Don't worry: this video was recorded last year (hence the new father puffy eyes!) this was our old boat, which we sold and is now sailing around the beautiful island or Sardinia with her new owner... Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊
:)
:-)
Boohoo no little em
Emma will be coming Sean... 😉 Fair winds, Chris, Rossella & Emma 😊