I'm restoring a 1964 14' Sears Traveler runabout and just lucked up on finding a good used 110 mercury outboard (6 cyl "tower of power" haha!). I was told it's a mid 1970's, but i'm gonna scratch around for serial numbers to check forsure this weekend. My little boat is solid as could be, but only rated for 50hp and ~2000 lbs weight. Outboard is longshaft and my transom is 20.5 inches, so that should be fine.<br /><br />Am i just absolutely crazy to think that i could reinforce my hull and make this work? I wouldn't think of dropping that powerful a motor on my transom and hitting the water, without first reinforcing it. I'm rather handy and somewhat engineering-minded, so I thought i would toss this out there to the masses and see if I could score any feedback, good, bad, or indifferent.<br /><br />Would an internal framework that replaced the floorboards, was steadied with wall supports that ran all the way back and connected to the transom possibly provide enough tension support to keep this motor from chewing up my transom? I'm tossing around ideas of fiberglassed 1/2" plywood connecting at the seams with rust-treated angle iron or some other hard metal bolting everything together. <br /><br />All this, and installing an aluminum internal fuel tank in the bow for better weight distribution?<br /><br />again, am i just crazy? i'm not too far along with restoring the hull to scrap it and find another one to match the find motor i got, either. But i can't say i'm not a good bit excited to try out my engineering masterpiece. Any advise at all, whether you've done something similar or not?<br /><br />thanks, i love this forum!<br /><br />-brad