reelfishin
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
I finally got a chance to get started replacing the transom in my 1962 Glaspar Tacoma, I cut away the inner transom and removed what was left of the old wood. The floor is rock solid with no rot. The only rotted wood was in the upper corners.
What shocked me the most was the lack of stringers? The floor sits only about 4 inched above the lowest point of the hull, it's made of 5/8" marine plywood with two layers of glass and resin on top. The entire hull is made of woven mat. I can see all the way up into the floor cavity and have cut open a bilge access point in the center about 8"x8". There are no stringers and no sign of any ever being there. There is barely enough room to get a hand into the center area below the floor. I know the floor in this was redone by a prior owner, and it's rock solid. the hull measures only 16' so there's not a lot of need for really super strong supports, but there are no lateral stringers at all, just the floor which contacts the inside of the outer hull nearly the whole way back other than about a 9" wide by maybe 2 in deep area right down the middle.
The boat had a 40 HP Merc on it, which I plan to reinstall, and ran and rode fine, I only cut into this since the upper 'wings' of the transom around the tie downs had gotten soft.
Were there many boats built this way? It's a closed bow, woven glass hull that is super light. The only wood I've found so far is the transom plywood, which is made up of several layers of thin plywood, the plywood inner wood on both gunwales and across the bottom of the dash.
It's the lightest boat of this type I've ever seen, two normal guys can carry the bare hull with ease. It ran like a speed boat with the 40 HP motor, yet I've seen these with up to 100HP on them. I've seen these badged as both Avalon and Tacoma models, with the only difference being seating layout.
How many boats didn't use any stringers?
(If this had stringers they'd have to have been nothing more than light wood strips) The current floor sits on the step in the hull that forms the outer chines.
What shocked me the most was the lack of stringers? The floor sits only about 4 inched above the lowest point of the hull, it's made of 5/8" marine plywood with two layers of glass and resin on top. The entire hull is made of woven mat. I can see all the way up into the floor cavity and have cut open a bilge access point in the center about 8"x8". There are no stringers and no sign of any ever being there. There is barely enough room to get a hand into the center area below the floor. I know the floor in this was redone by a prior owner, and it's rock solid. the hull measures only 16' so there's not a lot of need for really super strong supports, but there are no lateral stringers at all, just the floor which contacts the inside of the outer hull nearly the whole way back other than about a 9" wide by maybe 2 in deep area right down the middle.
The boat had a 40 HP Merc on it, which I plan to reinstall, and ran and rode fine, I only cut into this since the upper 'wings' of the transom around the tie downs had gotten soft.
Were there many boats built this way? It's a closed bow, woven glass hull that is super light. The only wood I've found so far is the transom plywood, which is made up of several layers of thin plywood, the plywood inner wood on both gunwales and across the bottom of the dash.
It's the lightest boat of this type I've ever seen, two normal guys can carry the bare hull with ease. It ran like a speed boat with the 40 HP motor, yet I've seen these with up to 100HP on them. I've seen these badged as both Avalon and Tacoma models, with the only difference being seating layout.
How many boats didn't use any stringers?
(If this had stringers they'd have to have been nothing more than light wood strips) The current floor sits on the step in the hull that forms the outer chines.