Hey Anthony, Nov.14, 2023 I used the same 1/4" ply for the deck on my boat. It is actually 2" thick. By using the idea of hollow interior doors with a honeycomb in between the outer surfaces. The whole deck is about i/4 of the weight of a single sheet of 3/4 plywood. The frame gives it the strength . On your hatches you could glue and screw on some wood strips around the edges. Do like wise on the doors . This will give you plenty of room for the screws. Enough to mount the hinges level to your deck and below the rug. Then the hinges would be hidden a little better. This would also prevent you from kneeling on those exposed hinges. Oooouch ! Going to check-out your video Clean Hidden Hinge Install BEEFED-UP!!! Curious as to what you came up with. Good Luck, Ray
Thanks Ray. Appreciate the insight. These videos are pretty dated, I use all aluminum lids now but in the event I do a wood project I actually have updated methods. Appreciate the feedback nonetheless.
Excellent workmanship. I just gutted a 16-foot vee and you're quickly becoming my go-to for tips and tricks. Thanks for the inspiration andn the thanks for sharing. 👍
Dude, I've been watching so many of your videos and some more on TH-cam, but yours are very great explaining and you do great work! You've motivated me to do my Lund boat restoration! It's in progress, but it's getting there! Keep putting content on, your channel needs more recognition!
Thanks so much man! I try to explain things the best I can and hope for the best. Channel is growing and i will keep going. Thanks for the input and helping the channel by subscribing!
This is a handsome build. I'm concerned about the size of the screws in the hinges vs the 1/4 inch plywood. Hope that it doesn't pull away over time. You might need to put some aluminum trim on the hinge side for reinforcement if you notice any fatiguing starting to happen. That will strengthen the plywood as well. I'm not as far as you are on my build yet, but I'm using thicker plywood, and I haven't decided whether I'm going to do hatches yet or not. I think I will now that I have seen how nice yours is. I'm not OCD, but I do love a good clean job and this is one right here. Thanks for this video as it's giving me some good pointers on my build.
Thanks for the compliments, I'll keep yall posted on the strength of the hinges and what not. I would recommend thicker plywood, I have since stated I got it wrong in this video, I actually have 11/32 plywood but regardless it was a pain to work with. Saves weight, yes. But harder to plan out build and fabricate altogether. Not sure what I will do on the next one. Good luck on your boat and thanks again!
Im Just Me Yeah it worked out well. I believe it will work out long term, just more upfront work to hide them. Design can definitely be improved upon but worked great for me!
I'm only 16 going on 17 I want my own boat after I get my license and get a job I love doing projects and all and you got me looking forward to doing so i would love to have one of a kind boat and you've thought me so O much thanks
Great idea !! Looks sharp ! Bad ass! I’m putting my hinges in the same way WOW love it !! Thanks for your channel such an inspiration for me , finishing my 12 foot aluminum will send some pics your way !! Keep it up brother :)
Anthony. I don't want to be a pill, but honestly, that does not look like ¼: plywood. I'm pretty sure, even from the perspective that we have that you are using ½" plywood. I agree with the matter of saving weight but I've been a carpenter for 50 years and a cabinet maker for the past 15 before retiring.And like you always say, "I'm no expert" but I'd appreciate it you would take a tape measure to a raw piece and double check it. One reason I'm saying this is that I'm about to go out and find myself a Jon boat try to duplicate what you've done. I'm that impressed, especially with the work you did on your live well. but I really can't see ¼" plywood taking those ½" staples you used. I'd like to hear from you on this. Thanks, and great job all around.
I started in a later video that I mis spoke. Sorry for any confusion, it is actually 11/32 plywood. You are correct, not 1/4 but definitely not 1/2 inch as well. I do have some ideas on what I would do differently on the next build but I am very satisfied with the 11/32 plywood coated in fiberglass resin for this build. On the underside of all hatches I had to put a runner to make them stable to walk on which essentially made it over 1/2. Theres a lot of ways to do it honestly.
@@AnthonyJonesBrigadeBoats While 11/32" is not ¼", (¼ being 8/32"), It is a hair over 5/16", which makes it just thick enough to accept a #6 screw without splitting out the veneers, especially since you took the time and care to pre-drill and glue the screw holes. That was my main concern, that you would eventually stress out the area around the hinges and cause the whole thing to come apart. Again. great job both with the mod of the boat and with the attention to detail when making the video. A question- after doing all of this, and considering the after-mods to beef up the door panels with 1x, would you reconsider going with ½" (which is no long ½") instead of the ¼"? I know some people are rolling their eyes wondering what's this guy got up his butt. But having worked in a cabinet shop for the past 8 of my 50 years in construction, and the shop being metric instead of standard, we got very accustomed to dealing in scotias, and splitting millimeters when figuring cabinet dimensions. And I was very impressed with your results when it came to the final tolerances after wrapping with carpet. It makes for a great first-class looking professional job. Here are a couple of charts I found that illustrates the differences. The second one might be of interest to you because it concerns the weight variations in different thicknesses of plywood. As you can see, there is almost an 18 pound difference between ¼" and ½" plywoods. What is the Actual Thickness of a Sheet of Plywood Plywood is often sold in 1/4“, 1/2“, or 3/4” nominal thicknesses, but the actual thickness is often 1/32” thinner. Because the actual thickness may vary measuring the plywood is the only accurate way to determine its thickness. A 3/4” sheet is actually 23/32” thick. A 1/2” sheet is actually 15/32” thick. A 1/4” sheet is actually 7/32” thick. Plywood Weight Chart The charts below show the weight of plywood panels at different thicknesses. Weight may vary slightly by manufacturer and product. Standard Plywood Dimensions Weight of 4′ x 8′ sheets of various types and thicknesses of plywood measured in pounds. Plywood Type Plywood Thickness 1/4″ 3/8″ 1/2″ 5/8″ 3/4″ 1-⅛″ Softwood Plywood 22 lbs 28.5 lbs 40.5 lbs 48 lbs 61 lbs 84.5 lbs Hardwood Plywood 24.5 lbs 31.5 lbs 45 lbs 53 lbs 67.5 lbs 94 lbs Marine Plywood 27 lbs 35 lbs 50 lbs 59 lbs 75 lbs 104 lbs Baltic Birch 26 lbs 33.5 lbs 48 lbs 56.5 lbs 71.5 lbs 99.5 lbs Particle Board 33 lbs 43 lbs 61 lbs 72 lbs 91 lbs 127 lbs MDF 36 lbs 46.5 lbs 66.7 lbs 78.5 lbs 99.5 lbs 138.5 lbs MDO 20 lbs 26 lbs 37.5 lbs 44 lbs 56 lbs 77.5 lbs OSB 25.5 lbs 33 lbs 47 lbs 55.5 lbs 70.5 lbs 98 lbs
@@crude4u1948 If you are asking how I would do it today if I were to do a 2nd build after what I have learned I will tell you this: The 11/32 is super light. We know this. Also total pain to work with. You saw th ed issues I had for pre drilling holes, finding hinges to accept the fitment, adding runners under hatches for support, ect. So, is it worth it to save the weight in the decking for a lighter harder to work material or would I do it again? I feel it wouldn't be worth the hassle of weight savings to go small and light. 1/2 inch, although heavier, would save me a lot of headaches if I were to use it just based off being able to plug and play piano hinges alone. I'd like to think I'd have some revolutionary way of doing it my second go round but sometimes I think it may just be better to keep it simple and go with 1/2 inch. I'd love to do some type of thin composite, metal, or hdpe plastic or something but we are talking a lot more $ and headaches. If I did build 2 tomorrow I would do it in 1/2 decking, try to do hatches in 11/32 with some sort of spacer under lips to pad it out to half inch, with smallest runners as possible in wood or some type of metal even, red cedar 2x2 framing again.
This is a great looking build. This isn't a suggestion but more of an inquiry. How about using strap webbing as hinges over steel hinges??? I have an all welded aluminum that I use for crabbing in rivers near Savannah but also bass fish out of it. I'd like to build a kit that I could winch out to use the boat for shrimp and crabbing.
if you would use a counter sink bit you would get the proper angle in the hinge holes and your tapered screws will sit flush with hidge , just make sure you get the right counter sink bit.. have different angled bits.
True that man. Unfortunately for this videos sake but fortunately for me, I have learned a lot since this video. As good as the counter sink bit works, I've learned the cleanest and most efficient way for me personally is a drill press. Thanks for suggesting!
I did. They don't work on this setup. Cabinet clearances and designs are a lot different from how framing and decking goes into a boat. Also most cabinet hinges require an insert or recess drilled into back side of door and no way you can do that in 3/8 decking. Cabinet hinges also have a lot of parts/degrees of adjustment which seems problematic. The way I'd did it is the simplest way I could think and has worked very well so far.
11/32 actually. I corrected on future videos. 11/32 actual thickness which is 3/8 nominal thickness. If you go to Home Depot and buy a sheet of 11/32 for under 30 bucks, that's what I used. In my WATERPROOF HATCH WITH FIBERGLASS RESIN video, I actually build a hatch step by step in raw form and you can see the thickness there.
Sheetrock screws dont have a tapering on them. Idk how you feel about using them on wood, but ive never had a problem with them at all. Theyre cheap too.
Quick question cause I guess I missed it. Where are or should I say how does water escape while fishing and it starts pouring rain. I see no worm holes. I’d buy this boat btw. Lol
Just depends on the hatch. The molded in rear hatches and the one up front w the light bar have weep holes hidden in the corners, the other hatches have gaps in the floor panels. I made sure to leave space for water to find it's way to the factory channels under the floor system. If flooded it should make it's way to the rear where I have a 1,100 gallon per hour bilge installed. Hopefully that helps you. I'm probably going to keep this boat a while but you never know!
Hello does those hinges held up well? Because I am thinking about doing it that way and I want to know if they hold up well! By the way great video!!🔥🎣
Still doing well on my boat but if your decking with 1/2 inch plywood the simpler newer solution would be purchasing 5/8 inch offset piano hinges. Available on tbnation.net
@@AnthonyJonesBrigadeBoats The only issue is that it’s very expensive and I’m from Canada so shipping + US rate change to Canadian gets me up for almost 400$ worth of hinges 😅
I'm 14 I just got my first bass boat and the storage on it is very iffy its a 1962 skeeter hawk nothing fancy but the storage doors are sticking out of the decking itself and Its not sturdy plastic that you can stand on. How do you think I can make wooden doors and hatches built into the deck to be flush? I need help a lot, Thanks
Everything from Snowboarding-hunting Huh... I'd prob need pics to see exactly what you are talking about. I'd think your best bet would be to build new hatches out of wood though. I love working with wood in boats because the possibilities are endless. You just have to spend a lot of time painting and sealing it properly. If you are on Instagram you can DM me pics and I can take a look.
Don't need three. It has metal C channel runners under the plywood that doubles as jig holders. If I was relying on hinges to prevent the hatch from warping then I definitely didn't do something right...
Yo, it's actually 11/32 to be exact which really makes it's closer to 1/3 inch plywood but who really is counting .08 variance of thickness? After wrapping it carpet it would be 1/4 ply, 1/8 inch carpet on top, 1/8 inch carpet on bottom, equals 1/2 inch total thickness. Maybe that's why it looks thicker? But yes, 11/32 plywood to be exact, not 1/2 inch.
thats cool...i started a 12 ft john boat i was like i would love to use 1/4" but even at 10" aprart it was flexing bad..i used 1/2" osb..dont the the way its chipped and compressed together but 2 coats of rustoleum should be ok...
Undercover_Bassin It is 11/32 plywood if you want to be technical about it. Easier to say 1/4 inch because it's only 6/100 thicker than 1/4 inch. I guess I can call it 1/3 inch. That's what it is believe it or not.
Undercover_Bassin No, as I explain in many of my videos the core strength of the deck solely relies upon the framing. Decking in my case is just a covering you can walk on, all strength and support is in framing. Yes, you will see I ran supports or runners under hatches to prevent flex on those. 90% of guys I see who wood frame use way more wood in framing than necessary and thicker plywood than needed. It only kills your boat in weight. No lumber store in my boat.
It's actually 3/8" ply if it's 11/32". Just like 2x lumber the actual thickness is less than the nominal thickness. 1/4" plywood would be 7/32" thick actual.
@@njsanna9709 1/4 inch plywood nominal thickness and actual thickness is both 1/4 inch. Going up to 3/8 translates over to 11/32. 1/32 inch variance in plywood between nominal and actual thicknesses is a far reach from 2x4 going to 1.5x3. At the end of the day who actually cares? We are talking about 1mm of variance here? 1/4 inch, 3/8, 11/32, the whole point is it is feather light and no where near the weight of anything 1/2 inch or above, which is what most people use. Big difference in weight when you compare my deck to say...5/8 plywood.
I know , sorry. I feel I get to the point better in my newer videos. This one was still pretty early in my TH-cam channel. There's definitely a learning curve!
Thanks for all the detail on the hinge install. Awesome!
Hey Anthony, Nov.14, 2023
I used the same 1/4" ply for the deck on my boat. It is actually 2" thick. By using the idea of hollow interior doors with a honeycomb in between the outer surfaces. The whole deck is about i/4 of the weight of a single sheet of 3/4 plywood. The frame gives it the strength .
On your hatches you could glue and screw on some wood strips around the edges. Do like wise on the doors . This will give you plenty of room for the screws. Enough to mount the hinges level to your deck and below the rug. Then the hinges would be hidden a little better. This would also prevent you from kneeling on those exposed hinges. Oooouch !
Going to check-out your video Clean Hidden Hinge Install BEEFED-UP!!! Curious as to what you came up with.
Good Luck,
Ray
Thanks Ray. Appreciate the insight. These videos are pretty dated, I use all aluminum lids now but in the event I do a wood project I actually have updated methods. Appreciate the feedback nonetheless.
Take care of yourself and family. True followers who understand will wait for updates.
I’m 15 and just bought a jon boat and your videos are very helpful and I’m getting a lot of ideas thanks
Excellent workmanship. I just gutted a 16-foot vee and you're quickly becoming my go-to for tips and tricks. Thanks for the inspiration andn the thanks for sharing. 👍
Excellent content mate. Keen to see more like it. More in depth than others I've seen.
Thank you
No problem, thanks for watching!
Keep up the good work Anthony I'll be using your hidden hinge Idea. Also the wooden frame is right up my alley.
Dude, I've been watching so many of your videos and some more on TH-cam, but yours are very great explaining and you do great work! You've motivated me to do my Lund boat restoration! It's in progress, but it's getting there! Keep putting content on, your channel needs more recognition!
Thanks so much man! I try to explain things the best I can and hope for the best. Channel is growing and i will keep going. Thanks for the input and helping the channel by subscribing!
This is a handsome build. I'm concerned about the size of the screws in the hinges vs the 1/4 inch plywood. Hope that it doesn't pull away over time. You might need to put some aluminum trim on the hinge side for reinforcement if you notice any fatiguing starting to happen. That will strengthen the plywood as well.
I'm not as far as you are on my build yet, but I'm using thicker plywood, and I haven't decided whether I'm going to do hatches yet or not. I think I will now that I have seen how nice yours is. I'm not OCD, but I do love a good clean job and this is one right here. Thanks for this video as it's giving me some good pointers on my build.
Thanks for the compliments, I'll keep yall posted on the strength of the hinges and what not. I would recommend thicker plywood, I have since stated I got it wrong in this video, I actually have 11/32 plywood but regardless it was a pain to work with. Saves weight, yes. But harder to plan out build and fabricate altogether. Not sure what I will do on the next one. Good luck on your boat and thanks again!
It’s really seems like you took your time doing it the right way! Really helpful for my future boat remodel. Thanks!!
Thanks! Appreciate you tuning in.
Been following you on Instagram. Didn't realize you were doing vids. Builds are great. Thanks for info.
Yeah man I originally started everything here on TH-cam. Thanks for following along!
My go to rebuild channel for my boat, awesome and thanks
BobbyBoy1962 Thanks for watching, good luck on the build.
Glad you did this video because I also don't want hinges on top. I'm getting close to doing carpet finally.
Im Just Me Yeah it worked out well. I believe it will work out long term, just more upfront work to hide them. Design can definitely be improved upon but worked great for me!
I'm only 16 going on 17 I want my own boat after I get my license and get a job I love doing projects and all and you got me looking forward to doing so i would love to have one of a kind boat and you've thought me so O much thanks
haunted wetlands No problem man, let me know how the build goes!
Anthony Jones I don't have a boat yet looking forward to getting one tho thankd
Thanks for sharing! I prefer the hidden hinges as well.
Instablaster
Thanks for your honesty, seems to work for you.
Thanks man. Worked out good, still works fine!
Would love to see the interior balance when you get it on the water. So far I love the build. Very nice job.
Great work fixing to start redoing my boat so I will be using all your tips and tricks
Frederick Brasch That's what it's all about man! Good luck on your build.
Thank you for your video! I just getting started on my TB, 14 footer
Keith Bartlett No problem, good luck on your build!
Great idea !! Looks sharp ! Bad ass! I’m putting my hinges in the same way WOW love it !! Thanks for your channel such an inspiration for me , finishing my 12 foot aluminum will send some pics your way !! Keep it up brother :)
Anthony. I don't want to be a pill, but honestly, that does not look like ¼: plywood. I'm pretty sure, even from the perspective that we have that you are using ½" plywood. I agree with the matter of saving weight but I've been a carpenter for 50 years and a cabinet maker for the past 15 before retiring.And like you always say, "I'm no expert" but I'd appreciate it you would take a tape measure to a raw piece and double check it. One reason I'm saying this is that I'm about to go out and find myself a Jon boat try to duplicate what you've done. I'm that impressed, especially with the work you did on your live well.
but I really can't see ¼" plywood taking those ½" staples you used. I'd like to hear from you on this. Thanks, and great job all around.
I started in a later video that I mis spoke. Sorry for any confusion, it is actually 11/32 plywood. You are correct, not 1/4 but definitely not 1/2 inch as well. I do have some ideas on what I would do differently on the next build but I am very satisfied with the 11/32 plywood coated in fiberglass resin for this build. On the underside of all hatches I had to put a runner to make them stable to walk on which essentially made it over 1/2. Theres a lot of ways to do it honestly.
Oh, the staples were stainless 1/4 inch. Going over the carpet, and into the 11/32 wood it does not go all the way through.
@@AnthonyJonesBrigadeBoats While 11/32" is not ¼", (¼ being 8/32"), It is a hair over 5/16", which makes it just thick enough to accept a #6 screw without splitting out the veneers, especially since you took the time and care to pre-drill and glue the screw holes. That was my main concern, that you would eventually stress out the area around the hinges and cause the whole thing to come apart.
Again. great job both with the mod of the boat and with the attention to detail when making the video.
A question- after doing all of this, and considering the after-mods to beef up the door panels with 1x, would you reconsider going with ½" (which is no long ½") instead of the ¼"?
I know some people are rolling their eyes wondering what's this guy got up his butt. But having worked in a cabinet shop for the past 8 of my 50 years in construction, and the shop being metric instead of standard, we got very accustomed to dealing in scotias, and splitting millimeters when figuring cabinet dimensions. And I was very impressed with your results when it came to the final tolerances after wrapping with carpet. It makes for a great first-class looking professional job.
Here are a couple of charts I found that illustrates the differences. The second one might be of interest to you because it concerns the weight variations in different thicknesses of plywood.
As you can see, there is almost an 18 pound difference between ¼" and ½" plywoods.
What is the Actual Thickness of a Sheet of Plywood
Plywood is often sold in 1/4“, 1/2“, or 3/4” nominal thicknesses, but the actual thickness is often 1/32” thinner. Because the actual thickness may vary measuring the plywood is the only accurate way to determine its thickness.
A 3/4” sheet is actually 23/32” thick.
A 1/2” sheet is actually 15/32” thick.
A 1/4” sheet is actually 7/32” thick.
Plywood Weight Chart
The charts below show the weight of plywood panels at different thicknesses. Weight may vary slightly by manufacturer and product.
Standard Plywood Dimensions
Weight of 4′ x 8′ sheets of various types and thicknesses of plywood measured in pounds.
Plywood Type Plywood Thickness
1/4″ 3/8″ 1/2″ 5/8″ 3/4″ 1-⅛″
Softwood Plywood 22 lbs 28.5 lbs 40.5 lbs 48 lbs 61 lbs 84.5 lbs
Hardwood Plywood 24.5 lbs 31.5 lbs 45 lbs 53 lbs 67.5 lbs 94 lbs
Marine Plywood 27 lbs 35 lbs 50 lbs 59 lbs 75 lbs 104 lbs
Baltic Birch 26 lbs 33.5 lbs 48 lbs 56.5 lbs 71.5 lbs 99.5 lbs
Particle Board 33 lbs 43 lbs 61 lbs 72 lbs 91 lbs 127 lbs
MDF 36 lbs 46.5 lbs 66.7 lbs 78.5 lbs 99.5 lbs 138.5 lbs
MDO 20 lbs 26 lbs 37.5 lbs 44 lbs 56 lbs 77.5 lbs
OSB 25.5 lbs 33 lbs 47 lbs 55.5 lbs 70.5 lbs 98 lbs
@@crude4u1948 If you are asking how I would do it today if I were to do a 2nd build after what I have learned I will tell you this:
The 11/32 is super light. We know this. Also total pain to work with. You saw th ed issues I had for pre drilling holes, finding hinges to accept the fitment, adding runners under hatches for support, ect. So, is it worth it to save the weight in the decking for a lighter harder to work material or would I do it again? I feel it wouldn't be worth the hassle of weight savings to go small and light. 1/2 inch, although heavier, would save me a lot of headaches if I were to use it just based off being able to plug and play piano hinges alone. I'd like to think I'd have some revolutionary way of doing it my second go round but sometimes I think it may just be better to keep it simple and go with 1/2 inch. I'd love to do some type of thin composite, metal, or hdpe plastic or something but we are talking a lot more $ and headaches. If I did build 2 tomorrow I would do it in 1/2 decking, try to do hatches in 11/32 with some sort of spacer under lips to pad it out to half inch, with smallest runners as possible in wood or some type of metal even, red cedar 2x2 framing again.
This is a great looking build.
This isn't a suggestion but more of an inquiry. How about using strap webbing as hinges over steel hinges??? I have an all welded aluminum that I use for crabbing in rivers near Savannah but also bass fish out of it. I'd like to build a kit that I could winch out to use the boat for shrimp and crabbing.
Obviously re watching your old stuff. What was your process for accounting for carpet when cutting the hatches?
th-cam.com/video/8bC7Ccg0AnU/w-d-xo.html
Good directions, thank you !
Nice work man thanks for the tips
great video. I'm learning alot from you.
Countersinking.....marvelous
I am working on a semi v bottom 12 ft Grumman.I am installing a floor but I am consirned about the balance.The Jonboat floor should work perfect.
I did 1/2 inch of foam between ridges in bottom, then covered in thin plywood coated in fiberglass resin, then carpet. Worked out great.
if you would use a counter sink bit you would get the proper angle in the hinge holes and your tapered screws will sit flush with hidge , just make sure you get the right counter sink bit.. have different angled bits.
True that man. Unfortunately for this videos sake but fortunately for me, I have learned a lot since this video. As good as the counter sink bit works, I've learned the cleanest and most efficient way for me personally is a drill press. Thanks for suggesting!
Excellent build. What size boat is this?
14ft
Look into using cabinet door hinges. They are specifically designed to be hidden.
I did. They don't work on this setup. Cabinet clearances and designs are a lot different from how framing and decking goes into a boat. Also most cabinet hinges require an insert or recess drilled into back side of door and no way you can do that in 3/8 decking. Cabinet hinges also have a lot of parts/degrees of adjustment which seems problematic. The way I'd did it is the simplest way I could think and has worked very well so far.
Thanks for the in depth explanation. The wood look like 1/2” is it really 1/4?
11/32 actually. I corrected on future videos. 11/32 actual thickness which is 3/8 nominal thickness. If you go to Home Depot and buy a sheet of 11/32 for under 30 bucks, that's what I used. In my WATERPROOF HATCH WITH FIBERGLASS RESIN video, I actually build a hatch step by step in raw form and you can see the thickness there.
You have impressed me very much!!!
Great job, Thanks for sharing!!
John boat looking good man let me know how sturdy she is when u test it
Will do. I'm going to baby her so hopefully everything will last!
Sheetrock screws dont have a tapering on them. Idk how you feel about using them on wood, but ive never had a problem with them at all. Theyre cheap too.
What about powder coating the hinges?
Is that oil base paint your using or a stain
Oil based paint by Rustoleum
i’m about to start a 14 ft build. what did you frame with. also, are the built in seats or benches in the jon boat able to be cut?
Good information thank you sir
This came out great!
How did this hold up? im about ready to do this
I'll use that.. Thank you
Quick question cause I guess I missed it. Where are or should I say how does water escape while fishing and it starts pouring rain. I see no worm holes.
I’d buy this boat btw. Lol
Just depends on the hatch. The molded in rear hatches and the one up front w the light bar have weep holes hidden in the corners, the other hatches have gaps in the floor panels. I made sure to leave space for water to find it's way to the factory channels under the floor system. If flooded it should make it's way to the rear where I have a 1,100 gallon per hour bilge installed. Hopefully that helps you. I'm probably going to keep this boat a while but you never know!
Hello does those hinges held up well? Because I am thinking about doing it that way and I want to know if they hold up well! By the way great video!!🔥🎣
Still doing well on my boat but if your decking with 1/2 inch plywood the simpler newer solution would be purchasing 5/8 inch offset piano hinges. Available on tbnation.net
@@AnthonyJonesBrigadeBoats Ok thank you so much!! 😁🔥🔥
@@AnthonyJonesBrigadeBoats The only issue is that it’s very expensive and I’m from Canada so shipping + US rate change to Canadian gets me up for almost 400$ worth of hinges 😅
Did you ever think about powder coating the hinges to better protect them, just an idea.
That's a good idea, would definitely be heavy duty
How much does it weight after you framed and carpeted ?
I’m afraid to do this because I load mine in my pickup in the bed
Itd be possible to load it. But youd want to start looking into a trailer soon haha
I'm 14 I just got my first bass boat and the storage on it is very iffy its a 1962 skeeter hawk nothing fancy but the storage doors are sticking out of the decking itself and Its not sturdy plastic that you can stand on. How do you think I can make wooden doors and hatches built into the deck to be flush? I need help a lot, Thanks
Everything from Snowboarding-hunting Huh... I'd prob need pics to see exactly what you are talking about. I'd think your best bet would be to build new hatches out of wood though. I love working with wood in boats because the possibilities are endless. You just have to spend a lot of time painting and sealing it properly. If you are on Instagram you can DM me pics and I can take a look.
What brand is your boat ?
14 Ft Grumman
Where did you get your hinges?
Lowes I believe
Where did you get the latches ?
Amazon: flush pull latches. Exact item is in description of my FLUSH PULL LATCH INSTALL video on my channel
Do u do builds for other people
I haven't yet but I do plan to in the very near future.
What carpet did you use?
Basic outdoor carpet from Home Depot
Three hinges to prevent warping.
Don't need three. It has metal C channel runners under the plywood that doubles as jig holders. If I was relying on hinges to prevent the hatch from warping then I definitely didn't do something right...
Step through my deck.
The carpet looks great but it looks like it weighs 150lbs more
yo bro..u keep say 1/4" ply..it def looks like 1/2"
Yo, it's actually 11/32 to be exact which really makes it's closer to 1/3 inch plywood but who really is counting .08 variance of thickness? After wrapping it carpet it would be 1/4 ply, 1/8 inch carpet on top, 1/8 inch carpet on bottom, equals 1/2 inch total thickness. Maybe that's why it looks thicker? But yes, 11/32 plywood to be exact, not 1/2 inch.
thats cool...i started a 12 ft john boat i was like i would love to use 1/4" but even at 10" aprart it was flexing bad..i used 1/2" osb..dont the the way its chipped and compressed together but 2 coats of rustoleum should be ok...
1/4 inch ?......looks like 1/2 to me
Undercover_Bassin It is 11/32 plywood if you want to be technical about it. Easier to say 1/4 inch because it's only 6/100 thicker than 1/4 inch. I guess I can call it 1/3 inch. That's what it is believe it or not.
and no problem with any flex ?
Undercover_Bassin No, as I explain in many of my videos the core strength of the deck solely relies upon the framing. Decking in my case is just a covering you can walk on, all strength and support is in framing. Yes, you will see I ran supports or runners under hatches to prevent flex on those. 90% of guys I see who wood frame use way more wood in framing than necessary and thicker plywood than needed. It only kills your boat in weight. No lumber store in my boat.
It's actually 3/8" ply if it's 11/32". Just like 2x lumber the actual thickness is less than the nominal thickness. 1/4" plywood would be 7/32" thick actual.
@@njsanna9709 1/4 inch plywood nominal thickness and actual thickness is both 1/4 inch. Going up to 3/8 translates over to 11/32. 1/32 inch variance in plywood between nominal and actual thicknesses is a far reach from 2x4 going to 1.5x3. At the end of the day who actually cares? We are talking about 1mm of variance here? 1/4 inch, 3/8, 11/32, the whole point is it is feather light and no where near the weight of anything 1/2 inch or above, which is what most people use. Big difference in weight when you compare my deck to say...5/8 plywood.
You ramble too much!
I know , sorry. I feel I get to the point better in my newer videos. This one was still pretty early in my TH-cam channel. There's definitely a learning curve!