Colonel Monk
07-16-2008, 05:54 PM
Hi There:
New to the forum -- here's an introduction, ship to BOLD below for the question... You'll know me here as Col. Monk.
Our family has two wood boats, a 1949 Chris Craft Utility 18' 6" and a "one-off" 1950 Suttoncraft Utility 19'.
We have had the Chris Craft since 1973, and it was used actively until 1988. Hasn't been in the water since. 2 years ago my Dad started to restore it. Project is going along well, it now has a new west system bottom (1 layer plywood/1 layer plank), new decks/transom, many new frames, and about 10 coats of varnish. He's been working with a local boat restoration outfit for tools, materials, and advice in N. MI. When I was home on vacation last week we put in a new motor -- 283 Flagship Marine and rewired the whole boat for 12V power. It's even got a bilge pump, blower, and FUSES now! ;^) So, we're at the point of details and finish work.
Our philosophy was that we're trying to make it a more usable boat than it was: more power for easy cruising, 12V for reliability, new school bottom so it won't sink anymore, etc. We want it to look like a show boat, but it will be used and we don't care that the value has dropped a wee bit due to mods.
NEXT UP: The new transmission is hydraulic, so the existing floor shifter for the old manual transmission will either need to be replaced or modified to work with the new.
We discussed this with the guy at the boat shop, and he said that though other people have gone the modified old shifter route it can be tricky to come up with a scheme for adding detents. The old lever is about 18" long and brass, so if you breathed on it the trans could slip into gear from neutral! Not very safe. If we could make this work it would be nice, but not necessary.
Anyone converted the old floor shifter to hydraulic trans? How?
Regards,
Col. Monk
PS the other route we are investigating is using the Morse ST lever for shifting - looks easy and sorta has classic looks. Suggestions?
New to the forum -- here's an introduction, ship to BOLD below for the question... You'll know me here as Col. Monk.
Our family has two wood boats, a 1949 Chris Craft Utility 18' 6" and a "one-off" 1950 Suttoncraft Utility 19'.
We have had the Chris Craft since 1973, and it was used actively until 1988. Hasn't been in the water since. 2 years ago my Dad started to restore it. Project is going along well, it now has a new west system bottom (1 layer plywood/1 layer plank), new decks/transom, many new frames, and about 10 coats of varnish. He's been working with a local boat restoration outfit for tools, materials, and advice in N. MI. When I was home on vacation last week we put in a new motor -- 283 Flagship Marine and rewired the whole boat for 12V power. It's even got a bilge pump, blower, and FUSES now! ;^) So, we're at the point of details and finish work.
Our philosophy was that we're trying to make it a more usable boat than it was: more power for easy cruising, 12V for reliability, new school bottom so it won't sink anymore, etc. We want it to look like a show boat, but it will be used and we don't care that the value has dropped a wee bit due to mods.
NEXT UP: The new transmission is hydraulic, so the existing floor shifter for the old manual transmission will either need to be replaced or modified to work with the new.
We discussed this with the guy at the boat shop, and he said that though other people have gone the modified old shifter route it can be tricky to come up with a scheme for adding detents. The old lever is about 18" long and brass, so if you breathed on it the trans could slip into gear from neutral! Not very safe. If we could make this work it would be nice, but not necessary.
Anyone converted the old floor shifter to hydraulic trans? How?
Regards,
Col. Monk
PS the other route we are investigating is using the Morse ST lever for shifting - looks easy and sorta has classic looks. Suggestions?