No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

woosterken

Lieutenant
Joined
May 18, 2005
Messages
1,431
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

grrrrrrrrr
mama always said if you dont have any thing nice to say , dont say any thing!!

i think it looks great!! love the color, red or blue boats are like a holes every body has one!!

woosterken
 

singinout

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
May 20, 2009
Messages
339
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

Hey very cool looking boat! That will stand out among all the cookie cutter boats! :) O yeah and suma u guyz...just chill. The guy just wanted to show you his boat. Its in excellent shape for its age! I wouldn't want to say that rot is not a possibility even if he dont see any but...I wouldnt make a big arguement out of it when you haven't seen the boat in person.

Cool boat, man! Have fun!
 

tallcanadian

Captain
Joined
Sep 7, 2006
Messages
3,250
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

That thing is mint. Beautiful boat and motor. Thanks for sharing that one. Nice!
 

geedubcpa

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Jun 1, 2009
Messages
209
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

Nice boat - too bad you will miss out on all the fun of replacing floors and transom - just kidding.

Hope you have a good place to store her, or perhaps invest in a really good watertight cover.

Very nice to see a piece of history like that.
 

rowley5383

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Aug 9, 2009
Messages
45
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

thanks for all the replies. I have been gone a few days and just got to read them. as for the ROT, it does not exist on this boat. end of discussion. It has been garaged kept (heated garage) 35 of its 36 years and will still be garage kept. I dont know if that is what kept it from rotting or not, or maybe a miracle, but if ya really dont believe me, I can give ya my address.
 

trendsetter240

Lieutenant
Joined
Jun 22, 2009
Messages
1,458
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

Wow. I have never seen a "blue-band" merc motor in such good cosmetic condition. Your grandparents knew how to take care of a boat.
 

rowley5383

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Aug 9, 2009
Messages
45
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

i would say grandpa did pretty darn good
 

CheapboatKev

Vice Admiral
Joined
Oct 4, 2008
Messages
5,813
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

Dont give out your addy...it may not be there one morning when you wake up! lol

Great boat AND the family ties are even better..Did your Grandparents take you on it when you were younger? Fond memories I bet!
 

rowley5383

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Aug 9, 2009
Messages
45
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

cheapboatkev, thanks bud. It has not been on the water since 1985 and I was born in 1983. They moved to PA (i live in IL) before I was born so I am pretty sure I was never on it.
 

reelfishin

Captain
Joined
Mar 19, 2007
Messages
3,050
Re: No Need to Restore. 1974 DUO Tri-Hull

Of all of the boats out of the Starcraft family, the Duo models were probably by far the best built boats, they were billed at the time as a higher end model, and face value only half proved that. It wasn't till I cut one up that I realized what they were made of.

The sandwich hull, glass/foam/glass, set up is the best I've seen, super light and naturally buoyant. The decks were wood but rot is rare even in the rougher examples. They were heavy for their size but not extreme. The lack of poly foam in these did wonders for longevity as the hull was able to drain and stay dry. I've not yet found one with water intrusion between the hull layers yet but I do think it's possible if a ding or chip were to go unrepaired. The same for the transom, which as in the Starcraft, it wood.

That motor you have is far newer than the boat, probably mid to late 80's. They were good motors, I own two of them myself, one may be headed for a similar Starcraft trihull I own.

The addition of those strakes to the lower hull made those very good handling boats. The 17' I had would corner like it was on rails, and once up fully on plane, it road nicer than any of my aluminum V hulls in all but the roughest chop. If the water got real rough, it wasn't the boat to be in, but only due to the ride, it never felt unsafe.

Since your in IL, you should be fine no matter where you run that boat, here I have the Delaware bay and Ocean to contend with, neither of which are trihull territory in my opinion.

Freshwater rivers and lakes are prime trihull boating areas, smooth water and lots of areas to explore make the trihull the right answer there. I keep my Starcraft around for river fishing, it's the most stable platform with he most interior space I can get and it don't need a huge motor to power it.

I'd have to say the boat you have there is a super rare find, not many of us find something that clean and that old, most boats get stored outside under leak tarps at best. Mold, water, and neglect take their toll pretty fast.
Keep that thing in a garage, keep it clean and well serviced and it'll outlast you.
 
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