Every once in a while doing this part time boat thing you get to do something really neat. I had a local guy here call me one day and said he bought an old wood boat and wanted me to look at it and see if it was worth keeping. When he brought it over I saw him coming down the driveway and thought " that boat looks pretty good". Upon closer look I realized it was an Ostrum (boat shop specialties) that was in remarkable shape. We poked and prodded and found zero soft wood. It had never had anything but a painted bottom and said it had been in a garage for the last 15 years. He has a Deschutes trip coming up so we decided to put a glass bottom on it.

I forgot to get any pics before flipping the boat and removing the chines.

Views: 1402

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Upon flipping the boat I saw that whatever bedding compound was used way back when had completely failed. What was left was hard as a rock. The chines were nailed on (the entire boat is nailed together) and came off alarmingly easy.

The current owner was gracious enough to sand off most of the previous bottom paint. I sanded the rest of the mixture of Brown Yellow and a particularly tenacious layer of Green. Who paints the bottom of a Drift Boat in U of O colors! It looks like the entire boat was Yellow at one point.

After removing the paint the boats history started to show, including this super cool patch and a few rock scars.

Bottom prepped for epoxy

Sealer coat

Glass laid on and trimmed

Wet out

First fill coat (not much fill yet). All fill coats will be done in the same day.

Fill coat #2

Exotherm of the excess scrape off in action

Fill coat #3

very cool, thank you for sharing,and for helping save another great old boat.

RSS

© 2024   Created by Randy Dersham.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service