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Ron, one of the first things I do when I evaluate an old boat like this is to push on the sheer rail between the stem and the frame. I'm trying to rack the boat. A solid boat will not rack and will feel like a single solid unit. A boat that has rot or soft wood at the chine and side-frame to bottom-frame joints will feel "soft" and let you push the boat around.
Do the same at the oarlock by trying to push the sheer rail into the center of the boat. It should not move at all.
After these two quick tests you start poking around the chine with a small screwdriver or awl looking for soft wood.
I wouldn't hesitate to rebottom a boat if thats all it needed for the right price. But chances are if the floor is rotted out, some frames probably need work too.
If you are thrifty, have plans and find good deals on wood you can build from scratch for under $2k. at least I could in 2009. Might be different nowadays...
Ron, I've had truck bed liner on the inside bottom of a boat that I own for fifteen years.
The difference in temperature expansion and contraction between the bedliner and the plywood will cause the wood in the plywood to pull away from itself. The bedliner will stay in one piece and look great but it will not be water tight.
If the bedliner is in good shape and the wood under it is not rotten then I would leave it. I would find a way to take off the chine and the bedliner at the chine and rebed the chine with polysulfide like 3M301 or with 3M 5200 depending on your flavor of that argument.
The only real reason to worry about the bedliner is if the wood underneith is already soft.
Sounds like I had better go check it out. Owner is asking $200 with the trailer. The price makes me wonder just how bad the condition is but I might get lucky.
The price is right. The trailer is worth $200. The boat is free and is your opportunity to get some experience in restoration. Randy's suggestions at evaluating the old boat are right on. The truck bed liner is the unknown in this one. Properly applied it is a good idea on stitch and glue but maybe not on a framed boat. I say maybe because I don't know for sure. If you tackle this rebuild you might be the first to take on the problem of truck bed liner removel and restoration on a framed boat.
I have seen several framed boats with truck bed liner applied. Most of them had it done because the owners felt they could not do the proper repair work, ie new bottom, leaky chine joint, so the bed liner was an attempt to do the "repair" the easy way. My questions would be what was the condition of the wood before the bed liner was applied? Was it applied over epoxy/glass covered wood? This would be the best case scenerio. Or, was it a last ditch effort to keep this boat alive for a few more years. This would suggest problems under the liner that have'nt gotten any better over the years, most likely rot. This boat may be one of those, but heck it's free so have at it and keep us posted. I would jump at the chance to buy this rig for $200 just to see what it would take to restore it in spite of the bed liner treatment.
Good luck and keep us in the loop.
AJ
Thanks Troy. I was checking out your project photos. I will see what needs to be done on this boat in comparison. Sort of a toss up to take this for cheap and put in alot of time to fix it up or just build new. I will look it over this weekend and get a prognosis.
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