Hi everyone.
I just bought my first boat and learned many many valuable lessons along the way. I bought a 1958 Lonestar XL runabout. 14'6" fiberglass. Learned why the transom cannot be rotted... learned that floors need to be strong... learned that pressurized tanks are hard to come by...
Expensive lesson. $500 for boat, trailer and 35HP motor.
$2500 for another motor, paint, transom, lights, seats, fiberglass, carpet, remote control, cables, steering wheel, etc etc etc.
I used Seacast for the transom and it worked wonders. Hard as a rock. There is a slight bow to the transom now (Wood did not support weight like it should have) but only off by 1" in the center.
The motor is a longshaft and the plate above the prop is level with the bottom of the boat. The boat is flat on the bottom and traditonally boat-like (is that a new term?) up front.
So... we're out on Lake Ontario after 1 month of rebuilding this lemon and working on trying to get the tilt right... out there full throttle (Maybe 35mph at most I think) and suddenly the boat lurches to one side and I drop a dookie in my pants. We pulled back and leveled out. It did it a few times.
Worries the crap out of me. I've come up with some possible reasons for this... Not sure if I am right. I was hoping someone could help me nail this down. I can provide pictures if asked.
a) The prop has nicks... maybe unbalanced?
b) Water was a bit choppy. maybe this old beast was not made for that kind of water?
c) Bow in transom? (Hope not... it cost me US$500)
d) Motor too long? (I think I ruled this out with the measurement...)
e) uneven at the back? There are small lumps at the bottom of the transom going under the boat. Runoff from the fiberglass I think. These are small little bubbles...
f) Needs a stabilizer? I was looking at a Stingray Hydrofoil and it says it stabilizes the boat...
g) Motor too big for boat? Maybe it just goes too fast for the boat to handle? No information plate on the boat yet... awaiting it from Transport Canada. but the OBC rating it came with from 1958 said 40HP...
Anything else could cause this? I want to go fishing up north in 2 weeks and we were hoping to do some tubing behind the boat. The 40HP makes it go fast as snot (At least it feels like it)
I also have a bench seat right up against the rear "pan" in front of the motor. Maybe people are too far back and I need to make back-to-back seats up front a bit?
I figure SOMEONE on here knows what I can do. I am lost. And I don;t enjoy boating that much when it feels like the boat is going to flip upside down on carve sideways into the water and fill up...
Here is an album from the first test day. I don;t have any from Day 2 as the water was a bit rougher and I didn;t feel comfortable out there. Lake Ontario is pretty big. Just click the link below.
http://s112.photobucket.com/albums/n197/cobraOPS/First Day in Boat/
I just bought my first boat and learned many many valuable lessons along the way. I bought a 1958 Lonestar XL runabout. 14'6" fiberglass. Learned why the transom cannot be rotted... learned that floors need to be strong... learned that pressurized tanks are hard to come by...
Expensive lesson. $500 for boat, trailer and 35HP motor.
$2500 for another motor, paint, transom, lights, seats, fiberglass, carpet, remote control, cables, steering wheel, etc etc etc.
I used Seacast for the transom and it worked wonders. Hard as a rock. There is a slight bow to the transom now (Wood did not support weight like it should have) but only off by 1" in the center.
The motor is a longshaft and the plate above the prop is level with the bottom of the boat. The boat is flat on the bottom and traditonally boat-like (is that a new term?) up front.
So... we're out on Lake Ontario after 1 month of rebuilding this lemon and working on trying to get the tilt right... out there full throttle (Maybe 35mph at most I think) and suddenly the boat lurches to one side and I drop a dookie in my pants. We pulled back and leveled out. It did it a few times.
Worries the crap out of me. I've come up with some possible reasons for this... Not sure if I am right. I was hoping someone could help me nail this down. I can provide pictures if asked.
a) The prop has nicks... maybe unbalanced?
b) Water was a bit choppy. maybe this old beast was not made for that kind of water?
c) Bow in transom? (Hope not... it cost me US$500)
d) Motor too long? (I think I ruled this out with the measurement...)
e) uneven at the back? There are small lumps at the bottom of the transom going under the boat. Runoff from the fiberglass I think. These are small little bubbles...
f) Needs a stabilizer? I was looking at a Stingray Hydrofoil and it says it stabilizes the boat...
g) Motor too big for boat? Maybe it just goes too fast for the boat to handle? No information plate on the boat yet... awaiting it from Transport Canada. but the OBC rating it came with from 1958 said 40HP...
Anything else could cause this? I want to go fishing up north in 2 weeks and we were hoping to do some tubing behind the boat. The 40HP makes it go fast as snot (At least it feels like it)
I also have a bench seat right up against the rear "pan" in front of the motor. Maybe people are too far back and I need to make back-to-back seats up front a bit?
I figure SOMEONE on here knows what I can do. I am lost. And I don;t enjoy boating that much when it feels like the boat is going to flip upside down on carve sideways into the water and fill up...
Here is an album from the first test day. I don;t have any from Day 2 as the water was a bit rougher and I didn;t feel comfortable out there. Lake Ontario is pretty big. Just click the link below.
http://s112.photobucket.com/albums/n197/cobraOPS/First Day in Boat/