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  #16  
Old 10-31-2009, 02:20 PM
Homefront Homefront is offline
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Apex,

Not raining on my parade at all - I asked for honesty from people with more knowledge and experience than I have. I thank you for your input!

This engine is promising as well, though not a diesel:
http://www.marineengine.com/cgi-bin/...ec7f253a533b30
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  #17  
Old 10-31-2009, 02:44 PM
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apex1 apex1 is offline
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If it´s not a Diesel it must be a steam engine! If that is negative, it´s not in a boat.
That is my philosophy. I know though there are other opinions. Fact is I do´nt know anything about marine petrol engines, and would never put one in a boat. But that is a biased opinion, sure.

Are´nt there other boats of comparable size in your region? Do´nt know what Pa means (and even if....)

Regards
Richard
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  #18  
Old 10-31-2009, 03:36 PM
Submarine Tom Submarine Tom is offline
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Homefront,

A small diesel is the way to go here...

Tom
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  #19  
Old 10-31-2009, 04:03 PM
Homefront Homefront is offline
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Pa = Pennsylvania. I'm about an hour north of Philadelphia.

You are in the same camp as my friend, who says he would never have a gas inboard, for safety reasons; his logic makes diesel my first consideration.

25hp may be a better starting point for this hull. Then again, perhaps another hull design is out there that is able to fish up to 4 people, handle rough water, provide some level of comfort for all day trips (this rules out something like a Grand Laker canoe), yet be efficient enough to be driven by such a small diesel at displacement speeds.

Perhaps a design like this would be more easily driven: http://www.boat-links.com/Atkinco/Ut.../FishHawk.html. I doubt that a conventional pilot house would be a good idea for this hull, as it looks like it has fairly low initial stability - the hard chines on the Sallie Hyde gave me more confidence that a small house would not cause unacceptable motion. For the FishHawk, a large center console, with a roof and aluminum framework for a soft enclosure might be light enough to work well, with the aforementioned dodger. The hull could be strip built, which would be lighter due to less framing, and I'm thinking that the rounded hull would also drive more easily. I'm not necessarily married to Atkin designs, but their online catalog is handy for ideas.
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  #20  
Old 10-31-2009, 05:25 PM
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Haha..
do´nt take that too serious mate. There are several hundred thousand people around with petrol engines, most of them are still alive! Thats just my personal opinion. (though I am very straight on that! I refuse to build a boat with a petrol engine)

We should first focus on your requirements is my suggestion!

How heavy the payload, how many people max?
How long the max. distance from port (range / speed)?
How serious the weather conditions in worst case?
Apart from the wheelhouse do you need a "cuddy" or a place for a loo?

I love the old Atkins plans (most of us here do), and sure the boats you linked to are able and rugged workhorses, bringing you back safe even in severe conditions. But.....
I have real difficulties when it comes to substantial changes in the original design.
A house for sure is such a change.
Both boats are definetively able to cope with 5 adults standing upright (how they can is another issue), without being in any danger, but no designer reckons they do so in a blow.
So, I do´nt know if it is a sensible decision to put a house on them. (with, I do´nt know, I mean exactly what it says!)
Maybe better we find a design that was developed with a house?

The Yanmar, as mentioned, is a nice engine, and could fit your needs when connected with a sufficient reduction ratio gear. That is not completely out of the race I think. But you must be sure to find all the missing stuff at reasonable prices! What they are going to sell you there is just two pistons and a housing. Flywheel, bell housing, alternator (pulley?), exhaust, cooling, etc. all missing. And we know, that a engine built by spare parts is about 6 to 8 times the price of a complete one.
Take that into account before you get too enthusiastic about this bargain.

Now lets start at the bottom: requirements?

Regards
Richard
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  #21  
Old 10-31-2009, 07:44 PM
Homefront Homefront is offline
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Very well - the requirements as you listed them:

PAYLOAD: 2-4 people, + - 200lbs of gear; coolers with ice, bait, poles, tackle boxes, spare clothes, tools, etc.
Too long to list would be the standard boat equipment (anchors, batteries, extinguisers, etc), which would add up to an additional 2-300 lbs.

AVERAGE TRAVEL: 25-30 miles round trip. Fishing and moving, that's about all we cover in a day.

WEATHER CONDITIONS: We will go out in 3-5' seas, and have been caught out in worse. If there is a small craft warning we will still go out, provided the NOAA is reporting improving conditions. We often leave the ramp before sunup, or late afternoon and fish until 10-11pm.

ENCLOSED SPACE REQUIREMENTS: Some kind of pilot house. Also, we would need a "privacy" space, which I believe could be accommodated by a dodger with a curtain. We also need storage for the above mentioned items.
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  #22  
Old 11-01-2009, 03:40 AM
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CDK CDK is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by apex1 View Post

The Yanmar, as mentioned, is a nice engine, and could fit your needs when connected with a sufficient reduction ratio gear. That is not completely out of the race I think. But you must be sure to find all the missing stuff at reasonable prices! What they are going to sell you there is just two pistons and a housing. Flywheel, bell housing, alternator (pulley?), exhaust, cooling, etc. all missing.
Too many negative waves Richard. The little engine comes with a real flywheel, starter motor, double pulley, water pump and a very interesting light alloy silencer.
That last item could mean that the engine was configured for a silent running generator like the completely encapsulated ones for yachts.
It does need an alternator and a heat exchanger, but these parts need not be Yanmar. Anybody who can cut and weld sheet metal could make some sort of bell housing that accepts the SAE flange of a small gearbox.
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  #23  
Old 11-01-2009, 04:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CDK View Post
Too many negative waves Richard. The little engine comes with a real flywheel, starter motor, double pulley, water pump and a very interesting light alloy silencer.
That last item could mean that the engine was configured for a silent running generator like the completely encapsulated ones for yachts.
It does need an alternator and a heat exchanger, but these parts need not be Yanmar. Anybody who can cut and weld sheet metal could make some sort of bell housing that accepts the SAE flange of a small gearbox.
Hi Cornelis,

that was not my intention to make negative waves!
Sure that was meant for a generator as mentioned several times. The alloy silencer I did not see though. (did not really look at the picture)
But:
Quote:
No alternator, radiator, fan blade or air cleaner. Belt-driven water pump with no belt or tensioner
and bell housing is left. Hence I said "be sure to find all the missing stuff at reasonable prices!" That must not be Yanmar, you´re right!

Thanks for correcting that!

Homefront
will come back later on the requirements.

Now. The payload comes out at about 600lbs ? How much is the catch?

Range is not a drama, being just about one hr from port, did I understand that right?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Homefront View Post
ENCLOSED SPACE REQUIREMENTS: Some kind of pilot house. Also, we would need a "privacy" space, which I believe could be accommodated by a dodger with a curtain. We also need storage for the above mentioned items.
That all together will hardly be possible in one of the Atkins designs we would like.

Any other boat suggestions / ideas ?



Regards
Richard
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  #24  
Old 11-01-2009, 09:36 PM
Homefront Homefront is offline
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My reasons for starting a thread concerning this engine are these:

I want my own salt water fishing boat.
Economics dictate that it be economical to both build and operate.
The realities of coastal sport fishing demand that it be dependable, seaworthy, and equipped to stay out for 8-12 hours.

This hull, equipped with a dodger, as well as a center console with a canvas enclosure, may be more in line with what I need at this stage of my life:
http://www.batritningar.se/default.a...sDetails&Id=18
Attached Thumbnails
how-difficult-convert-engine-variable-speed-skanesnipa-tg-24.jpg  

Last edited by Homefront : 11-01-2009 at 09:43 PM. Reason: incorrect link
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  #25  
Old 11-02-2009, 08:36 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Homefront View Post
This hull, equipped with a dodger, as well as a center console with a canvas enclosure, may be more in line with what I need at this stage of my life:
http://www.batritningar.se/default.a...sDetails&Id=18
When dodger and canvas enclosure are fine for you, then the Sallie Hyde will be the better choice I think. That boat at least has proven to be a good one in your waters.

The Atkin boats are very nice and valuable designs, but do not underestimate the cost and time to build such "oldtimer". If your intention is to save money, you´re probably better away with a second hand boat. Like the one you have shown in the first picture.

When you think the joy of building is part of your plan, then go for that. But at present the homebuilt will be above the cost of a good second hand boat.

What do you think?

Regards
Richard
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  #26  
Old 11-02-2009, 10:05 AM
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Oh yes, building is part of the plan!
25 years ago I was looking for an aluminum boat to use in NJ estuaries and the Delaware River. Money was not the issue then, but every time I found a used boat in the paper it would be sold before I arrived to look at it.

I stumbled upon the Glen-L catalog. Boat building hadn't even crossed my mind, but I ordered plans and built a 14' flat bottomed skiff with which I was hugely satisfied. Reading the catalog (more of a book really) I started envisioning the uses each hull type could be put to and why they were suited to those uses; what they could carry, how they behaved in different sea conditions, what kind of propulsion systems suited them. As my new appetite grew, I fed it with the writings of John Gardner, Pete Culler, Howard Chapelle, Phil Bolger and of course, Wooden Boat Magazine.
I've built 4 more boats since then, all ply-epoxy skiffs of different sizes/uses, learning as I went. I found out right away that being a boat builder and a carpenter (which I was then) required very different knowledge and techniques.

If I weren't supporting a family - paying for college, a mortgage, cars, insurances and all the other family man responsibilities - I'd turn to boat building to satisfy myself in my daily work.

Designs exist that are superior for their intended purposes than what can be found commercially. I balk at having to pay for features put into a boat to satisfy mass marketing requirements. I abhor factory made vinyl ester monstrosities (such as the Grady my friend owns, that we fish on) and the waste they present their owners and the environment in their construction and fuel use. I believe in efficiency, grace, utility, and art in boat design. It's rarely found in anything mass produced.

So yes, I will build my next boat, to satisfy many needs.

The boat in the first picture resides somewhere in the UK. American boating has not evolved much beyond blasting around in gas-guzzling planing hulls, so boats like the one in the photo are super rare to nonexistent here. If I want it, I must build it.
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  #27  
Old 11-03-2009, 05:17 AM
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apex1 apex1 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Homefront View Post
Oh yes, building is part of the plan!

I've built 4 more boats since then, all ply-epoxy skiffs of different sizes/uses, learning as I went. I found out right away that being a boat builder and a carpenter (which I was then) required very different knowledge and techniques.
So yes, I will build my next boat, to satisfy many needs.
That makes life easier, you already know what you are in.

So how will the Sallie do with a dodger, a light structure "house" and this Yanmar engine?
That lightweight Jap saves some weight, compared with the old iron pigs Atkin designed her for. That may compensate for the doghouse weight already.
But windage and stability sure are questions to be considered.
She is designed for carvel planking, that makes her a possible candidate for a strip plank method to save some weight, especially above WL, where we need to save.
Have you seen similar Atkin plans? Are you familiar with the "classic" methods?

Are there high ratio gearboxes for this engine around?

More questions than answers of course.

Regards
Richard
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  #28  
Old 11-03-2009, 11:31 AM
TowmanDoug TowmanDoug is offline
 
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For any one who is interested in the original spec'd engine, there is a similar, but less costly Perkins engine from the same vendor.

https://www.surpluscenter.com/pages/006.pdf

Bottom of page, center, description suggests an optional governor spring to allow the Perkins to be run varibale spped.
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  #29  
Old 11-03-2009, 11:44 AM
Homefront Homefront is offline
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TowmanDoug,

Good suggestion, but the PDF brochure doesn't reflect up to date stocking info. A search for that part number on the live page says it's out of stock.
Thanks anyway.
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  #30  
Old 11-03-2009, 12:00 PM
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She is designed for carvel planking, that makes her a possible candidate for a strip plank method to save some weight, especially above WL, where we need to save.
Have you seen similar Atkin plans? Are you familiar with the "classic" methods?

Richard,

Strip planking her in cedar, probably 5/8 x 1" and glass-sheathed inside and out, is what I was thinking. I'm familiar with carvel or "set works" planking, but the idea of making planes with the needed various radii, backing out planks, is at best unappealing. Besides, she would live on a trailer - not a carvel friendly circumstance.
I could plank her on molds, then strip laminate the real frames adjacent to the molds before I pull the molds out.
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