JasonJ
Rear Admiral
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2001
- Messages
- 4,163
So this whole gas price thing has me thinking about the Beast. As I have mentioned before, she has grown a bit fat in the arse over the last couple of seasons. Trolling motors, batteries, gas tanks, all sorts of things have helped to drop my speed from 40-ish down to low 30s. I can't help but wonder about the corresponding loss of fuel efficiency (I didn't pay much attention to usage until this season).<br /><br />I have been thinking about what I could do to trim some fat off. My first step was I myself lost 15 pounds, from 205 down to 190. It's a start. I try not to carry unneeded items on board. So it basically comes down to how the boat is built. As you all know, It was a bowrider, and it still has all that bowrider structure under the casting deck that I simply bolted on. It is unnecessary weight. I also built the center console and seat box entirely out of 1/2 inch ply, pretty darn heavy. Here is what I propose: I remove the entire upper half and ditch it. I remove the center console and seatbox. I am left with a bare empty hull, not unlike a rolled edge skiff without the rolled edge. I build a new casting deck, glassing it in, and use techniques that create strength and save weight. I rebuild the center console, but out of 1/4 inch ply, and strengthen it where needed. I could also make the center console dimensionally smaller (It was built to accomodate two behind and two in front, but I never carry four people so why have it). The seatbox would get a similar treatment. The rubrail area would get structure to maintain strength and a place for the bow mount trolling motor would be built in as well. The gas tank might get moved from the rear into the console to move weight forward.<br /><br />The goal is to shave that couple of hundred pounds it has gained, but not spend so much money as to not make the work and efficiency increase worth it. I know, "what about the aluminum boat hull dream?" Its just that, a dream. I have to look at what I have right now, and how I can better it. I know it is doable. I still have time to think about it, as I will be pulling it out of the water in a few weeks anyway. Other thoughts are certainly appreciated. Yes, I have considered the "sell it and get another" scenario, but this hull design has proven to be very tough and very comfortable, and very roomy for its length. It just seems more prudent to refine this rig than to start all over again.