Showing posts with label wood dory plans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wood dory plans. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2009

My Plans to Build a 16 Foot Wood Dory

Building a Dory

a 16 foot Grand Banks Dory From Plans


As a kid I did a lot of boat building, mainly as a helper to my dad. He was an avid fisherman, and enjoyed carpentry as a hobby. So, there was always a wooden fishing boat under construction in our garage. I learned a lot helping my dad with his boat building projects. And I learned even more fishing with my dad in the boats we built together.

A few of the boats we built would take on a little water. Not quickly, but gradually water would seep in below the floorboards and it required using a hand pump to pump the water out. My dad would usually be rowing or running the engine while I would do the pumping.

I remember one particular day we launched our most recent home-built fishing boat - it was just 12 feet long and built from plywood. I was rowing while my dad was rigging up our fishing rods, and by the time we were in the middle of the river, it was clear we were sinking. I stopped rowing to grab the hand pump and pump out the water. But this didn't keep us from sinking. It only slowed down the process of sinking. So my dad took over the oars and started to row again - fast - hoping to reach dry land before the little boat sank.

Just before the boat's gunwales started to sink, we managed to jump ashore. Here we watched as our beloved fishing boat slowly sank to the bottom of the river. It was then that we realized we'd gotten to the wrong side of the river and this left us with a problem. We either had to walk to the nearest bridge, about 18 miles upriver, or swim to the other side.

We chose to swim. We did not see anyone around, so we quickly stripped down to our birthday suits, and with one hand holding our clothes above the water, we managed to get back to our own side of the river. Just as we were struggling to get out of the water a group of boys from my school were passing by, and I can tell you I absolutely mortified!

This all happened a long time ago. My dad has long since passed away. And there have been many times in my life I have had dreams of building a boat again. I have spent a some time researching and looking at boat building plans, but with boats, especially fishing boats, size can make a difference.

I started out looking at larger boats plans - 25 to 35 feet - but the amount of work involved always overwhelmed me and I lost my excitement to start my boat building plans.

Recently I've had a change of heart and decided to start with a smaller hull - Something big enough to fish from on the ocean, yet small enough to easily trailer and store in my garage.

So, I've decided and found the plans - I am going to build a wooden 16 foot Grand Banks dory which I plan to power with an outboard motor.

I've purchased the dory plans, I've got the working space, and although I'm going to take my time and enjoy the project, I hope to have my Grand Banks dory built and ready to launch in time for spring Chinook salmon fishing in my area.

After building the 16 foot dory, who knows, I might build a 35 footer and tow my "Bankers" dory behind it. That way if my 35 foot yacht sinks, I can always get to safety in my Grand Banks dory - but dry and with my clothes on this time.

For those of you who are interested in building your own wooden fishing dory... Click that link to see the plans I'm using for mine.

DIY Dory Plans - Can You Build a Seaworthy Dory From Plans?

DIY Dory Boat Plans - Seaworthyness of DIY Dory Boats

These questions are very difficult to answer.

All types of boats are designed to operate independently of the storm or weather they find themselves in. If you and your dory boat manage these conditions depends on a number of factors - the dory plans and workmanship is one of them, and the other is the skill of the operator.

Classic wooden boats are designed to be a collection of individual framing pieces that carry the burden created by the water, transferred between all parts of the hull. This has been an effective method of building wooden boats that served the coastal community of thousands of years.

Newer boat models use a unibody construction that is very similar to modern cars. The original cars had a solid steel welded chassis, which was attached to the body, but the body and frame are integrated into a one piece structure much stronger than the original. Most all of the available dory boat building plans today are built upon this model. There are framed plywood dory plans and what is called "stitch and glue" dory plans that produce lighter, stronger and more seaworthy dory hulls.

A "stitch-and-glue" boat hull uses panels of plywood edge-glued to distribute the load of water evenly throughout the dory's hull. These are well known, but less known is the unibody boat hull construction that uses modern adhesives to join the different elements of the dory hull into a one-piece structure able with withstand the effects of force and seaworthiness. Despite these using clips or fasteners to hold the elements together while the epoxy glue or polyurethane cures, once it has fully cured you can remove all the clips and the resulting boat hull is incredibly strong.

Dory boat construction using a unibody design creates a vessel with added advantage: the resistance of shock. Although direct impact with submerged rocks and other outcroppings can poke a hole in the hull just as it would a fiberglass or any other type of hull, the impact of typical collisions are distributed throughout the hull bond joints, rather than focusing only on the immediate hull framing. This means far more substantial impact loads can be taken before major damage is done. The choice of epoxy and polyurethane adhesives in the construction means that the joints are flexible and not prone to crack or break when exposed to sudden impact loads.

The quality of construction also plays an important role in the dory hull's seaworthiness. If the selection of materials is low quality, the workmanship haphazard, or the application of adhesives and closures are not up to the strength requirements of the water conditions, overall hull strength will be compromised. The strength of materials and overall design affects the dory's seaworthiness. Poorly constructed hulls of ships never seem to withstand the rigors of open ocean for long. They have a bad habit of coming apart when you need them most, like when you are hurtling through breaking ocean waves, or plowing through wind and whitecaps, or being blown into underwater obstacles by gale-force winds.

The exercise of care when choosing your dory boat plans is the best remedy for maintaining a lifetime of seaworthyness.

Practical seaworthyness is really a function of the dory boat operator, however, not the boat. The vast majority of accidents at sea and accidents on land or in the air, for that matter, are caused by operator error.

Incredibly long-distance journeys at sea are actually quite safe for small boats.

In 1876, in celebration of the 100 year birthday of the United States, Alfred Johnson of Gloucester Massachusetts sailed from the North Atlantic to England in a 20-foot Grand Banks Dory called Centennial. Up until this time, few sailed a boat of this size on the high seas for such a distance through the storms and treacherous waters along this journey to get across safely.

Seamanship is not something that a person is born knowing. Instead, these skills are learned over time and experience on the water. A responsible boat captain with some experience and a good dose of caution goes a long way towards boating safety. Take all the training opportunities available to learn about navigation, weather, and other aspects of seamanship and piloting and you'll be a strong captain of a stout and seaworthy dory that you've built yourself.

Article by Wooden Dory Boat Plans - Build your own Grand Banks dory using step-by-step plans with digital images - Save $1000s and end up with a seaworthy Dory that will last a lifetime.