FishinLite
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2015
- Messages
- 83
- Reaction score
- 6
As origanlly built

What it looked like when I bought it 3 years ago ($800, boat, 60 hp Merc, & trailer).
After I pulled out the rotting red carpet.


Notices the holes in the floor. The boat needed a battery. The high speed side of the stator and the charging bridge were shot and some trigger wires had a bad case of insulation rot. The compression checked good so the motor got some minimal repairs and the 60 hp Merc chugged to life on the muffs.
I fished that way for the fist summer, enjoying the freedom to fish on waters away from home. Rabbit Lake, Big Sandy, Round, Big Tout to name a few. The Merc was coaxed to life on each outing. A used Minn-kota Power Drive v2 (off a pontoon) was added to the bow (Motor, 2 batteries, and an on board charger came off craigslist $200).
After rolling it home from the last outing of that year, I found that the left side wheel bearing had died on my last trip and the wheel was wobbling as I backed it into its winter home. New hubs and bearings on both sides were the order of the day and were added ($75 ebay) before the snow flew.
That summer had proven that the boat was worthy of breathing some new life into the beast.
In June, what I originally thought would be a reasonably short project began. The rod locker, drivers bench, stern bench, stern floor, bow plate, bow shelf, and console were removed to gain access to the crumbling floor. All the pieces that could be salvaged, to be used as patterns, were saved. I purchased three sheets of 5/8” marine plywood ($132 Menards) and two sheets of 1/4” hardboard ($13 Menards) to make patterns for the missing pieces and the floor. I also purchased two sheets of 5/8” baltic birch ($78 Sewiks) to replace the pieces that were exposed (rod locker top, bench tops, and console). The floor was about 5ft wide and 11ft long. I had the floor pattern in and out of boat untold times. Fitting, aligning, shaping and locating the mounting hole. The floor was cut out, biscuit jointed together, test fitted, more time than I want to remember.
I started collecting new and used parts for my dream fishing boat:
Seat pedestals ($250 Santa, Christmas presents from wife and kids),
Humminbird 899 (closeout $500 ebay),
Humminbird 859 (used $340 ebay),
Humminbird Ethernet Hub (used $180 ebay),
I-pilot Link head for PowerDrive (used $190 ebay Canada),
two ram mounts (used $30 ebay)
and the summer slipped away.
I rolled the skeleton of a boat into my work shop for the winter.



to be continued

What it looked like when I bought it 3 years ago ($800, boat, 60 hp Merc, & trailer).
After I pulled out the rotting red carpet.


Notices the holes in the floor. The boat needed a battery. The high speed side of the stator and the charging bridge were shot and some trigger wires had a bad case of insulation rot. The compression checked good so the motor got some minimal repairs and the 60 hp Merc chugged to life on the muffs.
I fished that way for the fist summer, enjoying the freedom to fish on waters away from home. Rabbit Lake, Big Sandy, Round, Big Tout to name a few. The Merc was coaxed to life on each outing. A used Minn-kota Power Drive v2 (off a pontoon) was added to the bow (Motor, 2 batteries, and an on board charger came off craigslist $200).
After rolling it home from the last outing of that year, I found that the left side wheel bearing had died on my last trip and the wheel was wobbling as I backed it into its winter home. New hubs and bearings on both sides were the order of the day and were added ($75 ebay) before the snow flew.
That summer had proven that the boat was worthy of breathing some new life into the beast.
In June, what I originally thought would be a reasonably short project began. The rod locker, drivers bench, stern bench, stern floor, bow plate, bow shelf, and console were removed to gain access to the crumbling floor. All the pieces that could be salvaged, to be used as patterns, were saved. I purchased three sheets of 5/8” marine plywood ($132 Menards) and two sheets of 1/4” hardboard ($13 Menards) to make patterns for the missing pieces and the floor. I also purchased two sheets of 5/8” baltic birch ($78 Sewiks) to replace the pieces that were exposed (rod locker top, bench tops, and console). The floor was about 5ft wide and 11ft long. I had the floor pattern in and out of boat untold times. Fitting, aligning, shaping and locating the mounting hole. The floor was cut out, biscuit jointed together, test fitted, more time than I want to remember.
I started collecting new and used parts for my dream fishing boat:
Seat pedestals ($250 Santa, Christmas presents from wife and kids),
Humminbird 899 (closeout $500 ebay),
Humminbird 859 (used $340 ebay),
Humminbird Ethernet Hub (used $180 ebay),
I-pilot Link head for PowerDrive (used $190 ebay Canada),
two ram mounts (used $30 ebay)
and the summer slipped away.
I rolled the skeleton of a boat into my work shop for the winter.



to be continued