Rabu, 09 November 2016

Plans Change


After talking with my co-worker, Ted Gauthier about building a boat, he said I should check out Glen-L Marines plans. He also decided to build a boat and settled on the 14 Zip from Glen-L. He said he found the boat for me, the Glen-L Squirt a 10 runabout. I wanted to stick with a small boat since my plan was to build in my basement and the 116" Mustang would make it out of the stairwell based on my measurements. I thought 10 was too small, but it could be stretched 10% to 11. The Squirt looked way cool, so I changed my mind and ordered plans on September 28, 2009 from Glen-L.
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src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha48YzI0N2mtkgmLNFjxhcqVTcmFe0tyPkxSklP11DUDO0gKa00gsM1h7jQSjQfWXkFe3RToDDe8wQ2OjNF9SkkdSduu3q3VH4viipcNIY37E3_PFprwM8VZxME3YR9PxHDsC0UIdBNqM/s320/pic1061-1.jpg" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 182px">
The image shown is a Glen-L Squirt stretched to 11 and built by Jeff Cobb of Baton Rouge, LA. He did a suberb job finishing out his boat and its inspirational to see such a fantastic looking boat.




The first step is transferring the lines from the drawing to a layout and assembly board. With a few yardsticks, flexible curves, french curves, circle templates, and large carbon paper purchased from Glen-L, I got the lines down on a 3/4" plywood board.

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