CONSOLE REFURBISHMENT/RELOCATION
At the time of purchase, the boat’s console was in a terrible position. Sitting on the floor, it was too low to ever be comfortable. My knees were against the steering wheel, which was barely at waist level when sitting down. I immediately decided I wanted it up higher. After a lot of messing around and mocking up the console on top of pieces of wood, I came up with a height to lift it by, then set about reworking the console.
I built the base from marine grade plywood, covered in several coats of sealant. In order to approximate the curvature of the floor, I made a scribe and used it to draw out a template. But, since I didn’t (and still don’t) own a jigsaw, I couldn’t really cut out the nice smooth arc that I drew. I cut it with a circular saw and just dealt with it not being a perfect fit to the floor.
I had already bought carpet to use for the cockpit floor, and now had to replan my usage of it to ensure I would be able to have enough to cover the console too. After replacing the floor (covered in the next section), I moved on to the console. (When I started to cover it, I already had the switch panel and fuse box installed and had them wired together.) Making this happen was not easy because the console is not regularly shaped. Wrapping it up in carpet left some seams in funny places. I handled these mostly by trimming the carpet to have a flat and flush seam, then running some Velcro strips along the seam to hide it. This sort of makes it look like the console has carpet with black trim. The carpet was held down with 3M Super 77 spray adhesive. I used c-clamps and blocks of wood to hold the carpet on while the glue dried.
The overall result isn’t bad. I actually like it. I had originally repainted the console black, to hide all of the little holes, but the first time I put the boat in the driveway to work on it I saw that this was ill-advised. Even on a cool day, the sun made the console untouchable. The carpet takes care of that, while hiding the holes and also providing me a convenient place to hang a lure while I’m switching tackle.
COCKPIT FLOOR & SEATS
Seats were easy; I reused what had been in my last boat, which got junked. (Eventually I replaced even these seats with newer items of better quality and color.)
However, the cockpit floor that was in the boat when I got it wasn’t good enough to keep. The whole thing was soft, and was so dry and rotted that it had literally buckled and lifted off of the hull stringers. Knowing that the old style of foam used back then could get waterlogged, I also was keen to pull out the floor and see what I was facing.
It wasn’t a pretty picture. Even though the boat hadn’t been in the water for more than three years, and had been sitting out of the weather for that amount of time, much of the foam under the floor was still damp. It was also pretty gross. So it all came out. And what lay beneath it was pretty concerning: nearly every rivet in the center portion of the hull was not only not original to the boat, but also was slathered in one material or another – ostensibly, to address leaks.
Some rivets were covered in what appeared to be hot glue, some in silicone, there was some sort of adhesive asphalt strip on a few, and others had been covered in some sort of unidentifiable material that had eroded or broken down over the years. All these rivets were hollow-core pop rivets. Clearly, at some point in this boat’s history, someone tried to address leaks. I actually think somebody either wrecked the boat or ran over something that damaged the keel; there are grease-pencil markings on the bottom of the hull pointing out several rivet locations, and the rivets there are all hollow-core pop rivets. But I didn’t see anything there to suggest the boat is unsafe; it was just repaired with the wrong kind of rivet.
However, this presented me with a dilemma. I had no way to put the boat in the water to see whether it leaked. Filling the hull with water didn’t really show me much, beyond some dribble marks on the outer hull. I felt sure it would reliably float, and frankly every other 30-40 year old rivet-hull boat I’ve ever been in leaked at least a little bit. I decided that for now, knowing that the next major project for this boat would be a deck rebuild with fresh flooring and carpet, I would only address the rivets that were under the cockpit floor and see where that got me. I can always try something else during the deck rebuild if need be, since at that time I’ll basically have the entire inside of the hull exposed at once. And, worst case scenario, at that point I wasn’t even $1000 into the boat, and I knew I could recover all my money my removing the outboard and selling it.
Because I was on a strict budget for this build – COVID and the ensuing lockdowns and restrictions had really put a chokehold on my wallet – I went with something I hadn’t seen anyone do before. I used adhesive-backed aluminum roof flashing. This material is basically aluminum foil with an adhesive bitumen (asphalt) backing. It’s very similar to Dynamat. It’s extremely sticky, gooey in fact, and can be pushed into small openings and crevices. I cut it into strips and laid them down in between the stringers so that every rivet was completely surrounded. Then I smoothed the material out around the rivet using a heat gun (on LOW!) and made sure it was firmly glued to the metal. The result was a really good and dry seal.
However, in retrospect, this might not have been the best solution. Removing that material later will be an absolute pain. Should this boat need another hull repair in the future, this could present some difficulties. A cheap and effective repair, sure, but it could greatly increase the cost of someone’s work in the future. (Hindsight, meh.)
Anyway, with the potentially leaky rivets addressed, I added in new flotation foam in the form of exterior foam insulation from the hardware store. This material is a closed-cell foam, suitable for use in a boat even though it’s intended for other things. I completely filled the voids in between the stringers with new foam.
I cut the new floor out of a single sheet of marine grade plywood, but had to install it in two pieces. This is because the front deck had a lip on it that prevented the floor from going in as a single solid piece. I can only assume that originally, the floor was installed before the front deck. Since I didn’t want to tear down the boat any further, and since I knew that I would be redoing the cockpit during the deck rebuild anyway, I decided to just cut the floor into two pieces and install it that way. I painted the wood with a few coats of sealer before gluing on the carpet. I did not use any staples on the carpet; glue only.
The carpet is cheap stuff from the hardware store, I only needed it to last a year or two at most. Once the floor was in, I was ready to install the console and finish wiring the boat.