reelfishin
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
Well, I added another to the fleet yesterday, a late 50's / eary 60's Duratech Sport. (The boat has an assigned HIN number so the title is from 1984, the year it was first titled in NJ).
I found the Duratech webpage and what info there is there on these but that's about all I have.
Someone has removed the original side console and installed a fiberglass center console, which will most likely either get tossed in favor of a smaller console or more original side console if I can find a good pic of an original one.
The wood floor is gone, it's all but turned to mush in the rear third of the boat. The motor however looks like it's not seen much use, even the original paint is in super nice shape for being 50 years old. It runs but will no doubt need a carb kit and tuneup.
The boat had been put away in a barn back in the early 80's, apparently not used or touched since then. The last date on the registration is 1984 and the woman who sold it said that her husband, who passed away bought the boat new and that they brought it here in 1984 but never used it here.
She said she doubted that the boat had more than a day or two of use since it was new.
The hull is perfect other than a missing end cap on the one side rail, and the fact that the original aqua blue vinyl coated gunwales have been repainted red. There is no corrosion anywhere, no dents, and the bow rail is solid and complete. The boat is made of really thick aluminum, more than three times thicker metal than my Starcraft. The transom is a single sheet of aluminum with the top edge rolled over and a center board put in to clamp the motor to. The transom metal is just under 1/8" thick sheet metal.
I was most surprised that it started right up after connecting a fresh tank of fuel to it. Even the prop still looks new.
The pics below are after a good wash and rinse, plus a 20 mile drive home in a down pouring rain after pulling it out of the barn where it sat for so many years. There was a coating of dust on it so thick you couldn't tell what color it was. There was a tarp on it but it was rotted away, and the barn roof had leaked letting water run down directly into the boat for many years, but the drain stayed clear. It did have about 8" of water laying in the hull when I found it but the aluminum is clean and well protected with paint even where the water sat. If nothing else, it shows there's no leaks since there were no drips on the outside of the hull.
Does anyone have any idea how to decode a Duratech serial number?
Anyone have one of these with an original console still in it?
I'm also considering doing a stick steer set up and standard twin stick controls to free up some floor space, if not, maybe just making my own side console from aluminum.
http://i40.tinypic.com/2z3x3wo.jpg
http://i39.tinypic.com/2dlvqy9.jpg
I found the Duratech webpage and what info there is there on these but that's about all I have.
Someone has removed the original side console and installed a fiberglass center console, which will most likely either get tossed in favor of a smaller console or more original side console if I can find a good pic of an original one.
The wood floor is gone, it's all but turned to mush in the rear third of the boat. The motor however looks like it's not seen much use, even the original paint is in super nice shape for being 50 years old. It runs but will no doubt need a carb kit and tuneup.
The boat had been put away in a barn back in the early 80's, apparently not used or touched since then. The last date on the registration is 1984 and the woman who sold it said that her husband, who passed away bought the boat new and that they brought it here in 1984 but never used it here.
She said she doubted that the boat had more than a day or two of use since it was new.
The hull is perfect other than a missing end cap on the one side rail, and the fact that the original aqua blue vinyl coated gunwales have been repainted red. There is no corrosion anywhere, no dents, and the bow rail is solid and complete. The boat is made of really thick aluminum, more than three times thicker metal than my Starcraft. The transom is a single sheet of aluminum with the top edge rolled over and a center board put in to clamp the motor to. The transom metal is just under 1/8" thick sheet metal.
I was most surprised that it started right up after connecting a fresh tank of fuel to it. Even the prop still looks new.
The pics below are after a good wash and rinse, plus a 20 mile drive home in a down pouring rain after pulling it out of the barn where it sat for so many years. There was a coating of dust on it so thick you couldn't tell what color it was. There was a tarp on it but it was rotted away, and the barn roof had leaked letting water run down directly into the boat for many years, but the drain stayed clear. It did have about 8" of water laying in the hull when I found it but the aluminum is clean and well protected with paint even where the water sat. If nothing else, it shows there's no leaks since there were no drips on the outside of the hull.
Does anyone have any idea how to decode a Duratech serial number?
Anyone have one of these with an original console still in it?
I'm also considering doing a stick steer set up and standard twin stick controls to free up some floor space, if not, maybe just making my own side console from aluminum.
http://i40.tinypic.com/2z3x3wo.jpg
http://i39.tinypic.com/2dlvqy9.jpg