Is any boat now better than waiting?

For the non-technical side of living with Steamboats, videos and general pictures.
farmerden
Stirring the Pot
Stirring the Pot
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Joined: Fri Nov 20, 2009 12:14 am
Boat Name: Steam Queen
Location: Shawnigan Lake B.C. Canada

Re: Is any boat now better than waiting?

Post by farmerden »

Do you wanna go steaming or build a perfect boat? Problem is-What's a perfect boat? Only way to find out is get out there! Maybe you have other interests-what's wrong with that? I sometimes look at these Gold metal Olympic athletes and notice they have no life other than what they win Gold at. Me- I am only going to pass thru here once so I'm gonna try everything.Probably never win Gold but play at everthing!! :P Den
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DetroiTug
Full Steam Ahead
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Boat Name: Iron Chief
Location: Northwest Detroit

Re: Is any boat now better than waiting?

Post by DetroiTug »

Adding ballast is very common (sailboats), most tugboats etc. In small steamboats, it doesn't necessarily signal a failure at design, it's more likely an assembled boat without enough weight in the plant and fittings to bring it down to the LWL, like the designer intended.

-Ron
Ofcalipka
Lighting the Boiler
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Joined: Wed Jul 18, 2012 2:45 pm
Boat Name: Kaimiloa
Location: Honolulu, HI

Re: Is any boat now better than waiting?

Post by Ofcalipka »

If the hull is sea worthy and fits with your engine and boiler and is compatible for the number of passengers and waters you'll be sailing on I'd say get it as the money you save on the less expensive hull can go into tools and other items to help you gradually clean up the craftsmanship issues and you will be far happier getting out on the water steaming than watching the boiler rust in storage.
Mike Rometer
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Re: Is any boat now better than waiting?

Post by Mike Rometer »

Mike Rometer wrote:One of the eternal dilemas. I have a similar situation, but have a load of other projects that really should be got out of the way first, and little space to park said beast. Many is the time I've rued letting a golden opportunity slip. You can only do what you can do, and hope it pans out in the end.
Due to space constraints etc. and that the hull perhaps required more TLC than I anticipated, I have allowed this one to slip through. Will I regret it? Time alone will tell. Probably, but I must clear my feet some or everything will come to a complete halt (that's, more so than it already has).
Retirement is about doing what floats your boat!

A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
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