New drift boat ready to rock.
Posted: Fri Jan 04, 2013 4:00 pm
Here's a photo of my boat, it's on it's way to get painted! It's all welded up, a few boats in line in front of me, but it sure does look sweet, don't it?
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+1 on that! Nice drifer no matter what though.oneshot wrote:I plan to ride in that someday!looks slick with out paint..
I look at some used fiberglass boats when I was shopping around. I didn't like how they looked after good hard use. The gel coat scratches, it gets a little yellow and some of them on the inside look like the underside of a bath tub, which I do not like. My Pavati is going to weigh the same as a fiberglass boat. And with a fiberglass boat if, heaven forbid, I bust a whole in it, I have to send it back or have it repaired that way, rather than keep a little JB weld in the boat. I chose the Pavati for the functionality, the ease of movement, and just some of the neatest feature on a boat. The door is definitely going to be great for some of my older clients to be able to get in and out of easily, I know a few of them that are already grateful for it.MotoBoat wrote:Nate, interesting your going Aluminum, and FF has decided on Fiberglass. What was the consideration when deciding on AL or FG hull?
you can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it? Guess you have not rowed down class 4 or 5 rapids..I have owned all three wood, al and glass driftboats they all have there pros and cons...If it was a job to row everyday i would be rowing a glass boat... jmoBodofish wrote:Let me count the ways; You can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it. Al does not absorb water. UV has no effect on AL. Want to add something, weld it on, no harm no foul. Pretty much Zero maintenance, rise it and put it away. The list goes on.........
"However if you use aluminum too often the hull will get tunneled." Wrong, tunneling of the hull is not from use, it is from bashing it on rocks. Yet the boat remains uncompromised. The same treatment of a glass boat will render a degraded gel coat and will allow water throughout the composite structure compromising it's strength. The only porous aluminum I'm aware of is when it's foamed, while in a liquid state. Other than that, I'd like to hear your proof. Aluminum still does not absorb water. Professional guides using glass boats means nothing other than they got a good deal from a glass boat mfg. And please do tell what sort of maintenance is required on an Aluminum hull? Speared metal boats, what does that mean? Were they being rowed at the time? Aluminum is much easier to fix, cut out the bad section and weld in a new one. Done, good as new. You can't do that with glass. I've owned glass, wood, steel and aluminum. Owned them for work and to play. Ease of ownership hands down goes to aluminum.BNRSteel wrote:However if you use aluminum too often the hull will get tunneled. If you want to get technical aluminum is pourous metal and will over time absorb water. Both types have their drawbacks. Many of the top guides in the state run glass boats, if glass was so horrible would that be the case? If you would like examples of speared metal boats that have sunk I can give them. No boat is maintenance free, you must have been wronged by a glass boat in your lifetime. Why are there so many glass drift boat manufacturers out there??? Because they work just like metal boats. I own an aluminum boat and I love it but I know it's drawbacks as well... It's not a simple fix if you spear aluminum on a rock.
bassplayer17 wrote:you can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it? Guess you have not rowed down class 4 or 5 rapids..I have owned all three wood, al and glass driftboats they all have there pros and cons...If it was a job to row everyday i would be rowing a glass boat... jmoBodofish wrote:Let me count the ways; You can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it. Al does not absorb water. UV has no effect on AL. Want to add something, weld it on, no harm no foul. Pretty much Zero maintenance, rise it and put it away. The list goes on.........
bassplayer17 wrote:you can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it? Guess you have not rowed down class 4 or 5 rapids..I have owned all three wood, al and glass driftboats they all have there pros and cons...If it was a job to row everyday i would be rowing a glass boat... jmoBodofish wrote:Let me count the ways; You can't row an AL boat fast enough to break it. Al does not absorb water. UV has no effect on AL. Want to add something, weld it on, no harm no foul. Pretty much Zero maintenance, rise it and put it away. The list goes on.........