I built a simpler one like this for my 5 yr old son 32 years ago from plans by "dynamite Peyson". most dangerous craft ever launched but the kids learned to swim quickly and had lots of fun.
I had similar results. Does the video maker mention the instability of this design? I had fun building this one but not so much fun floating it. With 2 smallish people aboard it was a little scary. I think this perou would work ok for pushing around the bayou as long as the gators aren't about.
I told my uncle you can make a bass boat out of a sheet of plywood, him and his stupid wife laughed at me behind my back talking about it. More of a John boat design, has even less waste. But I knew it was possible, I saw my design in a old old popular mechanics craft book. My dad had a shelf full of them. Thanks for posting, great job sir. Smooth "sailing" to you.
I made one from that plan. I lent the drawing to another guy, he made one too. I think a bit longer would be better. Popular Mech. Sept 1981. A bit small for any waves.
A sweet comedy with a happy successful ending. More of a pond or lake boat but as a 'child who can swim craft' to use as a macreler, perfect! Best wishes
Great Fun Project ....... Put a 1" x 2" Keel down the Center and it will track better , protect the Bottom , plus wobble less so you can add a Seat ...... I built one 16' feet long out of 1/4" inch ply like that ... It was a real sturdy boat , but tippy til we added a Keel .... Thanks for the Video ! Cheers !
A lovely day out at Snamh Beach..... It looks a bit chilly in that black Coomhola River estuary water. Great looking wee boat. Great fun for kids - big and small. Crazy light.....unbelievable
@@flupsdarups3897 Nope, that's something else again. Skeg's a kind of fin located well back. Given the shallow draft locating it on the transom with a flip up facility (just bolt it to two brackets) might be best?
Brilliant job Tim. There is nothing like a wooden boat. My most prized possession is a stitch and glue kayak I built 20 some years ago. If I sat in your boat I would have negative freeboard! Cheers!
I subscribed to you a long time ago because of your catamaran video and stayed around because of your other wonderful videos. I like this boat. I live in a small 1 bedroom apartment with a screened 2nd floor balcony and have been looking for a small boat to keep at home to row and maybe sail. I have seen a few 2 pice boats that might work and recently saw the mini Auray punt online. I think it is also a 1 sheet boat. I have also thought about a duck punt cut into two pieces and used as bookshelves at home and reassemble as a punt when used in the water. thumbs up! on your dory.
Spooky this video should pop up in my "recommended" list, Will is the man who taught me how to use a CNC router years ago in Cardigan. As soon as I saw the finger jointed plywood I knew, Will used that to good effect on yachts up to 25ft.
When I built mine I used a suggestion to use plastic zip-ties to help hold it together. Bonus is you can fibreglass over them and simply cut off the excess.
quick build that. Looks like a small northwest coast "Drift Boat" & a Nantucket dory. I had a few a those over 35 yr. fishing rivers in WA & OR. 16' footers 3 wood & 2 aluminum... 50 pound salmon and you'd have a jet boat.......
Madness of the best kind! Single sheet boat building is lots of fun, but I'd never believed you could build a single sheet dory, I'm impressed. My single sheet is shorter and beamier v-bottom for more buoyancy.
A while back, I built a very similar craft using two sheets of 4 X 8 marine plywood. It was patterned after a Louisiana Pirogue, which is a small dory style swamp boat. It had the problem of very little freeboard, but I used to take it out rowing in the Puget Sound near Tacoma, WA. I also rigged it with a lateen sail and sailed it on some Oregon reservoirs, but its real strength was as a row boat. It could float in about 2 - 3 inches of water. I was able to pole it in the tide flats when tide was out and not even a canoe had sufficient buoyancy. 8 years ago i agreed to sell it and I have regretted it ever since. It was 15 feet long and about 2 feet wide amid ship. I just may have to make another one.
I built a scale Dingle Curragh about the same size but with a bit more freeboard. I eventually added a fixed rudder that hooked over the gunwhale at the stern which made a huge difference to the longitudinal stability, it would actually go in a straight line without constantly correcting it. I also found thole pins easier to use than rowlocks, mainly as they fix the pivot point.
If you can make that from one sheet of ply, and learn a heck of alot in the process, imagine what a solid and usable rowboat you could make without the lumber restriction. Such as: higher freeboard esp in the middle, maybe a seat, maybe a vertical transom that could hold a low h.p. motor?? Maybe even a dagger board keel and sail mast?? Nice work. I had never heard of this single-ply contest. All your seams worked fine.
G'day, Yay Team ! What an excellent little Rowboat..., brilliant. When I was about 13 my father's flat-bottomed plywood Rowboat copped a honegrown Gaff-Rig with a Rudder & one Leeboard - which only sailed well when the Board was indeed on the leeward side (!), until it dismasted itself with snappage after 3 months in a Boatshed & Woodworm got into the (Sapling) Mast....; and after that one was presented with a Sabot that had a Bowsprit & Jib - withna Whisker-Pole (!). The Hull was 8 ft long, so I was pretty much too big for it from the start.., but as it was rigged for a crew of 2, one teenager could be pretty bloody busy (!). Your little thing looked as if it could benefit by having the Rowlocks redesigned to raise the Pivot-Point higher up off the Water - maybe 6 inches, which would then better enable you to lift the Blades out of the Water, & thus avoid "Catching a Crab" in choppy water...(?). The video of you being lifted by the heaving choppy Cross-Swells off the Beach, in that little thing, reminded me of the one time my friend who managed the old Sydney City Heliport at Darling Harbour (circa 1981) let me borrow the 12-ft Aluminium "Tinnie" which was their official "Rescue Boat" for dealing with possible Heligoflopswimming events (!)...; but when he had no expected movements for 5 hours he let me play with it - and I stretched the friendship somewhat by taking it down to the edge of Circular Quay to look at the Opera House from under the Harbour Bridge... I don't think I actually breached any Maritime Rules of Navigation (?), but the Ferry-Wakes were pretty exciting, and I probably should have worn the Life-Jacket but I left it back at the Heliport in case Old Mate had to suddenly rescue anyone while I was Expeditioning... Little Boats are seriously thrilling, when they're in water which isn't flat...; if one knows what one's doing and enjoys doing it anyway, kinda thing. Do you know anything about Mutant (Red) Silver-Beets ? About half my tiny planting of a dozen has had 6 of the Plants having various shades of Pink Stems, going from pale pastel to brightly fluorescent...; and I'm slightly unsure which end of them to eat, the Leaves or the Roots ? I posted a video of them a couple of dayze ago, if you feel like a bit of a giggle. Such is life, Have a good one... Stay safe. ;-p Ciao !
@@WayOutWestx2 When I was 13 if I'd built a Hang Glider they'd have locked me up..., whereas a Sailboat is effectively the biggest Aerofoil which a kid is permitted to play with in public places (!)...., no supervision required kinda thing. Such is Life, Have a good one... Stay safe. ;-p Ciao !
Amazing. 'That frisson of fear' lol. I have definitely felt that in shallow black water. There's nothing quite so terrifying as wondering what could be lurking beneath.
made one with one sheet of ply 13 feet long.same problem as you . no freeboard.. got a sheet of 2mm ply and turned it into a kayak.14 stone person no problem. curved it oyer the top. Derek
Tim, you could steam 2×1 lengths of timber and clamp them on to mold them overnight. I wonder would putting pitch pine on the bottom make it more stable ?
That machine is awesome! I want one!! The boat: how about a wider bottom (for increased stability) and redesigned, higher sides (for increased freeboard)? P.S. Funny narration, too!
It’s interesting how many variations to the same square footage and comparable available volume there are. I don’t perceive much variation in what they can carry, just how it performs. I’m interested how they take on water and stand a boat wake. Some are surely more easily swamped. Lol
What a fantastic fun piece of work - and all that from a single sheet of plywood! Amazing! Well done, Tim, Sandra, Will, Clare and Joe! Bravo! It does seem to be more of a fair-weather friend, but we have to hand it to your gumption and bravery! The next one will be even better. Hopefully it didn't put you in the poor house to make it. What does Hairy Henry think? Whinny neigh neigh? 👍
Now that's a boat! Great. I found it even in the wild water, behaving quite well. Too bad Sandra wasn't there. Could you introduce Will to us? Will he be joining you with more projects to come? Wishing you all the best over there.
Thanks, Arjen. Sandra was just too busy and it's hard to find the window in the weather these days. Will's a busy man too - but I hope he'll pop up often.
Built one very similar years ago. Most unstable craft ever and shortly thereafter it ended up in the fire. Maybe yours is dimensionally better? I should have stuck with the 2 - sheet, flat bottom punt about 8’.
I built a simpler one like this for my 5 yr old son 32 years ago from plans by "dynamite Peyson". most dangerous craft ever launched but the kids learned to swim quickly and had lots of fun.
I still have a copy of the book somewhere.
I had similar results. Does the video maker mention the instability of this design? I had fun building this one but not so much fun floating it. With 2 smallish people aboard it was a little scary. I think this perou would work ok for pushing around the bayou as long as the gators aren't about.
@@colinlothlorian .,? ?,
I told my uncle you can make a bass boat out of a sheet of plywood, him and his stupid wife laughed at me behind my back talking about it. More of a John boat design, has even less waste. But I knew it was possible, I saw my design in a old old popular mechanics craft book. My dad had a shelf full of them.
Thanks for posting, great job sir. Smooth "sailing" to you.
I made one from that plan. I lent the drawing to another guy, he made one too. I think a bit longer would be better. Popular Mech. Sept 1981. A bit small for any waves.
That looks like a ton of fun!
Over to you now, Ben? Can you make a better one?!
@@WayOutWestx2 You did a grand job! How much does it actually weigh?
@@xsbxsbxsb At 6.05 he says the boat weights about 15 pounds/ 7 kilos. Nice work.
Lovely little boat.
A sweet comedy with a happy successful ending. More of a pond or lake boat but as a 'child who can swim craft' to use as a macreler, perfect! Best wishes
Great Fun Project ....... Put a 1" x 2" Keel down the Center and it will track better , protect the Bottom , plus wobble less so you can add a Seat ...... I built one 16' feet long out of 1/4" inch ply like that ... It was a real sturdy boat , but tippy til we added a Keel .... Thanks for the Video ! Cheers !
I love challenges like this. Giving yourself design constraints forces you to be creative. Necessity is the mother of invention.
A lovely day out at Snamh Beach..... It looks a bit chilly in that black Coomhola River estuary water. Great looking wee boat. Great fun for kids - big and small. Crazy light.....unbelievable
You are so lucky to live in such a beautiful place and with wonderful friends.
That was fun to watch. Will you make a larger one to harvest mackerel in. You have such wonderful friends to help you. Blessings to all. 💕
That's the plan!
Take some of the scrap and make a skeg (or whatever it is called) on the bottom to keep it going straight.
Its called a keel
@@flupsdarups3897 Nope, that's something else again. Skeg's a kind of fin located well back.
Given the shallow draft locating it on the transom with a flip up facility (just bolt it to two brackets) might be best?
Delightful video. Nice looking boat. "There is nothing-absolutely nothing-half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats.”
Well said!
Ratty said, dreamily ...
OK. I smiled all the way thru. Happy little boat!
Your videos always make me smile and your crafting skills are amazing!
Thank you!
Brilliant job Tim. There is nothing like a wooden boat. My most prized possession is a stitch and glue kayak I built 20 some years ago. If I sat in your boat I would have negative freeboard! Cheers!
Cute little water bug of a craft . Everyone came back smiling !
Keep them coming. Enjoy and appreciate your simple approach to small boat building as well as your narratives
That's the plan!
Just love your videos.😀👍, I smile all the way through them.
I subscribed to you a long time ago because of your catamaran video and stayed around because of your other wonderful videos. I like this boat. I live in a small 1 bedroom apartment with a screened 2nd floor balcony and have been looking for a small boat to keep at home to row and maybe sail. I have seen a few 2 pice boats that might work and recently saw the mini Auray punt online. I think it is also a 1 sheet boat. I have also thought about a duck punt cut into two pieces and used as bookshelves at home and reassemble as a punt when used in the water.
thumbs up! on your dory.
If your ceilings were high enough you might be able to hang it up there when not in use - it would make a fine lampshade : - )
Ok bro's. Cool boat. New challenge. Make two of them for a pontoon sail boat using 2-4 sheets, aaaaand go!
Spooky this video should pop up in my "recommended" list, Will is the man who taught me how to use a CNC router years ago in Cardigan. As soon as I saw the finger jointed plywood I knew, Will used that to good effect on yachts up to 25ft.
Yes, small world! Cardigan's loss is west Cork's gain. I'll tell him you were looking in..
Somehow he makes building and rowing a small boat sound like a children's fairy tale book.
Such a lovely show. No health and safety, just us kids watching this.
When I built mine I used a suggestion to use plastic zip-ties to help hold it together. Bonus is you can fibreglass over them and simply cut off the excess.
Tim in a Nutshell, höhöhö
This looks really accessible! This would be a fun Thing to build/use with our 4/5 Year olds. Thanks for the Plans!
I've never seen anyone age a child using fractions before. What a brilliant idea!
@@Godshole I am from Germany, i feel ashamed. Metric ftw!
@@DIYdiacsnFarmstead HA ha ha, no reason to be ashamed, metric works too. I believe that would make the child 0.8
or 0.HoHoHoHoHoHoHoHo
Wonderful project boys!
It's a beautiful shape!
Thanks, Steve!
quick build that. Looks like a small northwest coast "Drift Boat" & a Nantucket dory. I had a few a those over 35 yr. fishing rivers in WA & OR. 16' footers 3 wood & 2 aluminum...
50 pound salmon and you'd have a jet boat.......
What a fantastic little boat. Great job.
Just brilliant thanks for posting
Glad you enjoyed it
That’s a wild experiment. I’m glad you shared it!
Yes it was!
Fantastic Tim - I am really impressed. Nothing can stop you from trying new things, wonderful.
Madness of the best kind!
Single sheet boat building is lots of fun, but I'd never believed you could build a single sheet dory, I'm impressed. My single sheet is shorter and beamier v-bottom for more buoyancy.
How absolutely delightful. Thank you.
What a joy.
I like the lines of that ...... looking forward to seeing the full size version soon.
Just waiting for warmer weather..
WOW ! This is FANTASTIC 💕💕
Thank you so much!!
Wonderful. 2 of these, think catamaran. Can't wait to see that
A while back, I built a very similar craft using two sheets of 4 X 8 marine plywood. It was patterned after a Louisiana Pirogue, which is a small dory style swamp boat. It had the problem of very little freeboard, but I used to take it out rowing in the Puget Sound near Tacoma, WA. I also rigged it with a lateen sail and sailed it on some Oregon reservoirs, but its real strength was as a row boat. It could float in about 2 - 3 inches of water. I was able to pole it in the tide flats when tide was out and not even a canoe had sufficient buoyancy. 8 years ago i agreed to sell it and I have regretted it ever since.
It was 15 feet long and about 2 feet wide amid ship. I just may have to make another one.
Sounds like you need to make another one soon. We'll be doing the same - aiming for 12'
That was a fun video! Your always up to something!
Great little project!! Not one for rough seas, but still lots of fun.
Fantastic video.. Best I've seen this year.. Your cnc is mighty
Glad you liked it!
Thanks for posting and sharing. Neat boat!
Cool! My Grandpa call it "Ruckswilli".
I’ve built some boats and this one you did is awesome! Thank you!
You could charge to cut them out for people😉 This chap sounds like he should be narrating the 'Clangers'😸
I really enjoy your inventive adventures!
I could see putting a top skirt or deck on top & turn that shell into a mini kayak.
Agreed, even a canvas skirt would be amazing.
How much fun is this!
❤❤ I really enjoyed this video. Thanks for sharing.
That was quite the adventure.
I built a 1 sheet wonder as well a while back it really is great fun :)
I built a scale Dingle Curragh about the same size but with a bit more freeboard. I eventually added a fixed rudder that hooked over the gunwhale at the stern which made a huge difference to the longitudinal stability, it would actually go in a straight line without constantly correcting it. I also found thole pins easier to use than rowlocks, mainly as they fix the pivot point.
If you can make that from one sheet of ply, and learn a heck of alot in the process, imagine what a solid and usable rowboat you could make without the lumber restriction. Such as: higher freeboard esp in the middle, maybe a seat, maybe a vertical transom that could hold a low h.p. motor?? Maybe even a dagger board keel and sail mast?? Nice work. I had never heard of this single-ply contest. All your seams worked fine.
One of those little electric outboard motors for kayak anglers would be cool. The ones with foot pedal throttle
G'day,
Yay Team !
What an excellent little Rowboat..., brilliant.
When I was about 13 my father's flat-bottomed plywood Rowboat copped a honegrown Gaff-Rig with a Rudder & one Leeboard - which only sailed well when the Board was indeed on the leeward side (!), until it dismasted itself with snappage after 3 months in a Boatshed & Woodworm got into the (Sapling) Mast....; and after that one was presented with a Sabot that had a Bowsprit & Jib - withna Whisker-Pole (!).
The Hull was 8 ft long, so I was pretty much too big for it from the start.., but as it was rigged for a crew of 2, one teenager could be pretty bloody busy (!).
Your little thing looked as if it could benefit by having the Rowlocks redesigned to raise the Pivot-Point higher up off the Water - maybe 6 inches, which would then better enable you to lift the Blades out of the Water, & thus avoid "Catching a Crab" in choppy water...(?).
The video of you being lifted by the heaving choppy Cross-Swells off the Beach, in that little thing, reminded me of the one time my friend who managed the old Sydney City Heliport at Darling Harbour (circa 1981) let me borrow the 12-ft Aluminium "Tinnie" which was their official "Rescue Boat" for dealing with possible Heligoflopswimming events (!)...; but when he had no expected movements for 5 hours he let me play with it - and I stretched the friendship somewhat by taking it down to the edge of Circular Quay to look at the Opera House from under the Harbour Bridge...
I don't think I actually breached any Maritime Rules of Navigation (?), but the Ferry-Wakes were pretty exciting, and I probably should have worn the Life-Jacket but I left it back at the Heliport in case Old Mate had to suddenly rescue anyone while I was Expeditioning...
Little Boats are seriously thrilling, when they're in water which isn't flat...; if one knows what one's doing and enjoys doing it anyway, kinda thing.
Do you know anything about Mutant (Red) Silver-Beets ? About half my tiny planting of a dozen has had 6 of the Plants having various shades of Pink Stems, going from pale pastel to brightly fluorescent...; and I'm slightly unsure which end of them to eat, the Leaves or the Roots ?
I posted a video of them a couple of dayze ago, if you feel like a bit of a giggle.
Such is life,
Have a good one...
Stay safe.
;-p
Ciao !
Ah, yes. Some of the best memories are made on the water : - )
@@WayOutWestx2
When I was 13 if I'd built a Hang Glider they'd have locked me up..., whereas a Sailboat is effectively the biggest Aerofoil which a kid is permitted to play with in public places (!)...., no supervision required kinda thing.
Such is Life,
Have a good one...
Stay safe.
;-p
Ciao !
Lovely video and a clever little boat!
Amazing. 'That frisson of fear' lol. I have definitely felt that in shallow black water. There's nothing quite so terrifying as wondering what could be lurking beneath.
Exciting though, isn't it?!
Surprisingly nimble and fast little nutshell!
What fun! I once used a dory to tow my 16 X 8 feet floating houseboat to a dry dock nearby. Meant to be a seaworthy design.
Lovely Lines. Well Done!
Good dory design !
I think so too!
Another great video. Your both so clever, looked like great fun. 😀
Welcome to the TinyBoat/MiniBoat World! 😁👍✌
Use surgical "jell" pad, only 1/2" thick but great on the bum! 🤪🤣👍✌
Looks like a folding boat I was once given. Brilliant design. Mine was sunk by someone in bray harbour several years ago unfortunately
Time to make a new one?
I'd love to seeing as I now live on the West Coast. We will have to see
How could anyone dislike this video? Seriously, that was adorable.
...because people are cunt wagons
I know! I loved it. He should be hosting a series of children's learning shows! Brilliant! :)
You inspire me with your creativity!
If you place pool noodles on the top edges, it would add an inch or two to the height and may be more stable?
It might look a little strange though?
Pool noodles/fenders?
@@WayOutWestx2 fiberglass and paint them?
Hey any more updates on this boat and design? Great videos very interesting, I have a kayak myself and would love to make something similar myself
I wish I had the time to make a larger version
Great video
Thanks!
Thanks !
Now to figure out how to power it with a giant spring...
Great craic, well done!
wow amazing, very clever 😊😎👍
Greetings from way out east (meath). Love your vids. You have some awesome tools 👍
never enough!
With Tim trying to find a good way to build a flash steam boiler it will only be a matter of time until he makes a little steam powered boat.
made one with one sheet of ply 13 feet long.same problem as you . no freeboard.. got a sheet of 2mm ply and turned it into a kayak.14 stone person no problem. curved it oyer the top. Derek
Tim, you could steam 2×1 lengths of timber and clamp them on to mold them overnight. I wonder would putting pitch pine on the bottom make it more stable ?
Brilliant
Fabulous! It really looks like a little boat folded from paper. And yes, you must design and build one that will be good enough for racing :)))
That machine is awesome! I want one!!
The boat: how about a wider bottom (for increased stability) and redesigned, higher sides (for increased freeboard)?
P.S. Funny narration, too!
Wonderful
It’s interesting how many variations to the same square footage and comparable available volume there are. I don’t perceive much variation in what they can carry, just how it performs. I’m interested how they take on water and stand a boat wake. Some are surely more easily swamped. Lol
Well done !
Can I suggest cutting a series of very large holes in the floor of the boat to save further on the weight?
Might effect the free board a wee bit.
You should go out Bantry Harbour and take a trip around the Fastnet
What a fantastic fun piece of work - and all that from a single sheet of plywood! Amazing! Well done, Tim, Sandra, Will, Clare and Joe! Bravo! It does seem to be more of a fair-weather friend, but we have to hand it to your gumption and bravery! The next one will be even better. Hopefully it didn't put you in the poor house to make it. What does Hairy Henry think? Whinny neigh neigh? 👍
Thanks, Guys. Every penny (about €30?) was money well spent, don't you think? : - )
Leuk bootje.
It must have been so hard to find a pencil 5 times bigger Tim!!
I'd go at it the other way, and paddle it like a canoe. great build though. Perfect small boat , from one sheet.
Now that's a boat! Great. I found it even in the wild water, behaving quite well. Too bad Sandra wasn't there. Could you introduce Will to us? Will he be joining you with more projects to come? Wishing you all the best over there.
Thanks, Arjen. Sandra was just too busy and it's hard to find the window in the weather these days. Will's a busy man too - but I hope he'll pop up often.
Top job Mate !!!
Really, really cool!
I think a double bladed paddle instead of oars is the way to go.
Oars deliver more propulsion
they really need a 2 sheet plywood boat contest to be worth anything
How neat! An interesting video as always
Did you used to narrate for pattington bear show ? ??
nice job Tim wish i was there to help
so much fun!
Looks like lots of fun...
Built one very similar years ago. Most unstable craft ever and shortly thereafter it ended up in the fire. Maybe yours is dimensionally better? I should have stuck with the 2 - sheet, flat bottom punt about 8’.
That was fun