
OCTOBER 2011: DESCHUTES RIVER
The Deschutes is outstanding in the fall! Less people, more steelhead and calmer wind if you can believe it...
Even a two day trip on the weekend after work is worth the effort. This boat carries three peoples worth of stuff as well as the three peoples just perfectly!!

I found rubber wine cask 'bungs' (bungs?) to plug the self bailing holes on calmer water and they work great, just don't let your bow puppy chew on them.
OCTOBER 2011: TRAILER RASH
After numerous river trips this year on the McKenzie, Owyhee and Deschutes, I have to finally make my first repair. I did not notice the damage until many months after the Owyhee trip in April. I was inspecting for damage after a Deschutes trip 3 weeks ago when I expertly and (involuntarily) planted the boat on a rock at the top of Whitehorse (for about 2 minutes) trying a route that I have never tried before (far right). Even though I parked the boat on top of a rock (can't remember the local pet name) there was no damage.
However, after coming home, I did notice two round 'router' holes right at the chine, one on each side of the boat up front. Turns out it was my old trailer bunks (screws under carpet) finally wearing through and the 40 mile washboard Owyhee shuttle road last Spring took its toll. Check your trailer for damage too!!!
JANUARY 22, 2011:
After a 9 month build (ironic), we finally took the boat out for the maiden voyage on the McKenzie river. A beautiful sunny Saturday with high green water at about 10,000 cfs.
The boat handled great, tracked well, turned well and with 9 1/2 foot oars, it seems to move when you need it to. The only adjustment needed is to add gasket material to the hatch combing to seal the baby leaks.
Launching at Finn Rock about 100 feet up the road from where the water usually lives...
Since the boat is a mix of Don Hill McKenzie Driftboat, Briggs'ish interior and morphed fully self bailing passenger and oarsman footwells, I thought it appropriate to christen the footwell with a mix of Kickin' Chicken, Krown Royale and James Bean...
Clover Point is always large this time of year, great waves at the top and if you don't pull away to the side at the bottom, you can expect a rather sticky hole to contend with...
I even let my Day row... It is weird seeing the boat out of the garage.
JANUARY 2011:
After a slight delay due to me not reading the directions (just another mans opinion, anyway) and researching epoxy / paint compatibility I am almost ready to say "it's a boat".
I have historically used West System epoxy with good results and Pettit Easypoxy paint with great results. However, I mixed it up this time and used System 3 epoxy with the Pettit paint over the top. After 1.5 months of drying, it was still tacky as was the Old Masters marine spar varnish. After much research and phone calls after the fact, I stripped off the paint and varnish with mineral spirits and sand paper, ouch and yuck!
The fix was buy another 200 dollars worth of System 3 top coat paint and try it again, seems to be working. I did not realize that this process could be so complicated and systematic. I highly recommend that you read and research unlike me...
The first official "Lounge Test"
Oarsman footwell plumbing to the outside world.
Taping and painting with System 3 Topcoat Camano Red, San Juan Tan and Clear coat instead of varnish. Still need to oil the handrails and battens.
Almost finished with painting...
Stripping off the pettit paint which evidently does not work over System 3.
Putting on the battens, lots of googempucky.
NOVEMBER WORK BREAK:
Didn't get the boat done by winter, going to have to buy a heater for the garage after I get done working for a living...


The hole in the side is the front footwell drain hole flush at the false floor level. The hole is 10 inches above the very bottom of the boat.


Decks are painted and the passenger footwells are installed and sealed.

OCTOBER 17, 2010: PAINT, FINISH WORK, PLUMBING...
Got all the finish materials in the mail this week, plumbing hardware, cloth, paint more resin, etc. Puttin' the hammer down (or picking it up) and making progress...
Using Southco brand thru hull fittings, one stainless (on the left) for the below waterline out flow, and a plastic flush mount drain thingy for the footwell.

It is not the best feeling in the world (a religious experience, to say the least) to drill a 2 inch hole in the side of your boat below waterline. God bless 5200 and epoxy!

I saw the light.

This is the Oarsman footwell out flow inside the mid compartment, eventually being connected to the thru-hull with about 18 inches of 2 inch hose.

5200 and resin hopefully will protect against fishes swimming into the compartment.

Inside of the thru-hull placed just above the chine.

Oarsman footwell drain on the right side, front, flush with the bottom.

Painting the hatches.

First coat of System Three Silver Tip on the out sides.

Testing paint, oil and varnish combos... Using Pettit Easypoxy Burgandy and Grand Banks Beige paint, Marine Spar Varnish, System Three Epoxy.

The spar varnish is taking its sweet time to cure, so I had to be productive while waiting for the stuff to dry...





The good 'ol fashioned hacksaw...












The latch and hatch test.

Decided on Southco latches, why? because everyone else is raving about them.

Raised the hatch framing up 1/4 inch, with a 3/4 inch space between it and the decking, then routed a 5/8 inch wide X 1/4 inch deep channel in the 1/2 thick hatch material (fir plywood).
Debated heavily on all types of hatch designs as many do, and decided the weight and strength of 1/2 inch plywood was easiest and worth it.

Made space for a 1/2 inch thick piece of oak for a solid hinge mounting area. The hatches are just over an 1/8 inch higher than the decking, however a 4 inch Paco Pad should mitigate that issue...

Holy Moly, what a pain in the butt...

3/8 inch fir decks, with 5200 and a 1:2 stainless screw / ring nail ratio.

I still can lift one side of the boat under my own power, it must not be THAT heavy :) yet.

With deck framing complete, onto oiling the compartments interior with boiled linseed oil, turpentine and marine spar varnish 1:1:1 ratio (Thanks for the input Brad, if it does not work I am going to hunt you down)
With the oil thinned down, it really soaks in nice. I have put 3 coats on so far in a course of a week.

When installing these fir pieces, it was quite deceiving to the eye about what was level and what "seemed" level.

Intentions are to build a couple of kitchen tables for camp that fit into this massive 25 inch deep front compartment.

This is the framing for the raised passenger footwells. These footwells are also about 10 inches from the bottom of the boat. The plan is to drill 2 inch holes (one on each side) in the side of the boat right at floor level against the bulkhead. The framing is slanted for theoretical drainage to one end of the footwell.
Even with the raised footwell, passengers have 11 inches of vertical legroom, which seems fine when tested by a 6 foot 1 inch hydro-turbulence testing engineer...
April 18, 2010: SPRING FEVER

Dreaming about why I am not out on the river fishing and rowing, like the good 'ol days. In reality, still working on decks and hatches and spending way too much money on
boats!!!!

I angled the sides of the oarsman's foot well to hopefully give more legroom when in kickback mode and slanted the floor to the front to eventually facilitate the self-bailing
plumbing. It is a googempucky 5200 mess right now, but well worth the
sealed outcome.


The bottom of the footwell is going to be 10 inches from the bottom of the boat. I would imagine if I am drawing more than that, I deserve wet feet.

Going to have to route out a notch in the above piece to fit the Southco hatch latches being planned.




If I forget to measure twice, I end going back to the store for more 60 dollar sheets of plywood...

A shot of hatch landings from underneath. The rabbits in the bottom and top ribs are working out pretty slick to hold the plywood.
MARCH 14, 2010: DECK FRAMING

Putting just the right "anti-pooling" slope in the length of the deck...hopefully.




Measuring and fitting, fitting and measuring, painstaking...

Planning on fir top ribs, oak hatch landings and framing and 3/8 inch fir plywood decking.
MARCH 5, 2010: 18 X 54

It is quite a difference between the 16x48 and 18x54 boats, gonna need a bigger shop.

March 1, 2010: INTERMISSION: GOING BACK TOGETHER

The current bottom has 20 oz fiberglass on it with epoxy / graphite on top. I had to drill through this when installing the new rib inside, then fill the screw holes back in with resin. Had to make sure I recessed the screws well through the fiberglass to seat good into the plywood bottom. Folks say to measure twice, cut once (I measured 6 times before drilling holes into the bottom, whew !)

Tah dah !! - Back to building the new boat...
February 28, 2010: INTERMISSION: GOING BACK TOGETHER

Decided to double up rib #8 this time. I am not quite confident that one 20 oz. layer of glass on the bottom is sufficient for a boat that loves rocks and technical water. Even though the UHMW plastic I had on this boat for 14 years eventually rotted the bottom out, (had to replace the bottom last spring) it sure took the brunt of impacts compared to fiberglass.

What was really happening on Saturday afternoon...
February 15, 2010: INTERMISSION
While I itch to work on the new boat, The rock god on the McKenzie came down and said, "Let their be cracks in ribs and holes in bottoms of your current boat!"
And so it goes, cut, grind, sand, epoxy, measure, cut, replace, epoxy, sand, drill, screw and paint...

Intermittent Black Butte Porter breaks make it all possible.
The #5 and #8 rib were cracked and the plywood pushed up in front of both.

I used a hacksaw blade to cut into the damaged rib vertically every 4 inches, then used the blade starting at the drain holes, to separate the rib from the plywood, cut
the screw, then hammered and pried the rib from the bottom.
Then used a disk grinder to grind off the 5200, level the pushed up plywood and clean everything up. Decided to leave the top part of the screws that remain in the
plywood, partly based on the fact that they are embedded in the wood
and epoxy on the bottom but mostly out of laziness...
I flooded the pockets of plywood with resin, then pushed the plywood flat back into place and let set up.


Comment
Comment by Mike Baker on February 3, 2011 at 5:17pm Hey Robb,
The boat looks outstanding! I love the way it sits in the water. 9 months.... does that make me a God Mother or at least a crazy Uncle or something?
Great job
Mike
Outstanding work there Robb. Well done!! I'll look for you behind the wheel of that great new rig next time I'm on the McKenzie.
GH
Hi Robb,
Just taking a look at your blog again. So cool to see all these steps. A work of art! Thanks for sharing.
-Kelly
Comment by Eric Loudenslager on January 5, 2011 at 6:31pm
Comment by lhedrick on November 29, 2010 at 8:10am
Comment by Mike Baker on November 4, 2010 at 7:06pm
Comment by Jim Philpott on November 4, 2010 at 6:33am
Comment by Robb Grubb on November 3, 2010 at 10:03pm
Comment by Jim Philpott on November 3, 2010 at 8:46am
Comment by Robb Grubb on October 14, 2010 at 11:28am © 2012 Created by Randy Dersham.
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