Thank you all so much for your support. I finally reached 100K subscribers and 100K views on a video. This was a great 61st birthday present! I'm hoping to make more interesting stuff in the future, so stay tuned and have a great day!
Keep coming up with more ideas!!I've been going through depression over the past years. I seen some of your diy a few yrs ago and thought one day it would be nice to do these type of projects and now I've got a handful of great ideas I'm currently working on. You have inspired me to do so many things!!! With all my heart Thank you sir.
Увлечённые мужики типо Вас, получают удовольствие ✨как дети 👶👶🍼, Вы светитесь 🧐🤓🤗🤔🙄👏👏👏👍🤝✌🛥🚣♂️как и Я, с Вами. Спасибо 🙏💕что Вы есть! Только на таких как Вы мир держится!!!!
Bloody love it.. Reminds me when my dad and I rebuilt a Paulsbo, (round bottom), wooden boat in our garage...when we lived in West Seattle. After it was finished, we slowly putted up to Kingston...from the Duwamish. Loved that boat
I was canoeing in a beautiful Old Town wood and canvas canoe in a cypress swamp once. We got up on a cypress knee and poked a hole in the bottom. Being on the back side of the swamp, we were in a pickle. Luckily, I had my first aid kit and used a piece of moleskin to repair. It worked and allowed us to paddle out. Your duct tape fix made me think of that adventure.
so great! creativ and clever solutions. I bought a construction site from your bike trailer last summer. 2 trailers built, 2 weeks of great vacation with my son. the video reached 2.3 million clicks. i admire your work! greeting jenni.swiss
I absolutely love your addition of the captains boating hat! :) Its the most *perfect*, yet subtle "cherry on top touch" that highlights your awesome water speedster! *Very* nicely done sir. I don't think anyone else could've executed it better than yourself.
Man, this has been a great ride. Thanks for that. The final product is remarkable. It has that beginning 20th century handcrafted flair of antique race cars and open cockpit airplanes. And it seems to ride well in the water too. Oh, I just subscribed to the channel. So, happy belated birthday!
That is great ideal. I have a suggestion for putting on the final top panels, use a piece of thin hardwood bent and shaped to fit similar to how you shaped the framing wood underneath, then instead of putting screws directly into the coroplast causing the deformation detentions where every screw is, you put the screws into the trim that runs along where the screws go, and this will apply even pressure on the coroplast and have an even appearance of deformation pressure detention. It will look really professional, and it will be stronger. That seems so fun i could try it myself.. You have a good eye for designing. You know how to take a few simple and cheap materials with a little imagination and knowledge you have something worth the effort.
Paul, the lord really loves what you do and how it inspires people and stirs their hearts, but most importantly he love you more than you would know. As Johnny cash would say, say a prayer to the man upstairs. Have a good day buddy!!
Hi there Paul , I've used corraplast on a few projects and the were both a success, This year I'll be constructing a canoe/ kayak from the same corraplast signs here at work that used to get tossed in the trash one the advertised special is over , Recycl reuse I say. Awesome little boat you have there Captain Paul . Best regards from Lloyd way up here in Ontario Canada.
It's kind of like the philosophy of a Ford Mustang, the whole body is load bearing, it is not just a rigid frame with sheets attached, the sheets themselves are the frame. Looks ingenious, and above all it works!
Not sure where your Mustang is entering the equation ? Unibody is the word. It's not a Ford concept at all. The first unibody car was a Lancia, in the 1920's. The first production unibody car was the 1934 Citroen Avant. First US unibody car was a Chrysler. Just sayin'...
Nicely done, Paul! Another enhancement to consider(my guess is you already have) - A shroud mounted to the rear deck, perhaps open to the rear, which functions as a sound isolator for the operator. I realize that will create a challenge with operation of the start arrangement you currently have.
Absolutely love your builds :) Since getting the first set of plans have now also gone CoroPlastic and will have a little fun once the weather gets better.
Built my first boat out of 2 sheets of 3/8" Plywood with 375 1&1/2" wood screws holding it together & fiberglassed over the seams. It had a nice strong oak keel. Put our 18hp Sea King O/B engine on & man did it fly. I outrun my friend Scotty in his 18ft. Larson with a 135hp mercury OB. My boat was a pumpkin seed hydroplane & sat 2 people.
The style reminds me of a feathercraft. I sold my 1955 feathercraft vagabond last year . I sure do miss my little boat. I put a 95 model 60 hp Johnson. It was just scary lol but I loved it. Nice little vessel buddy.
Well mate that's a bloody ripper very nicely done ,I'm building one at the moment lawn mower powered inboard custom everything .it's the second one and a mini boat and absolutely fun to create something out of used junk I love your approach to keeping it lite and simple mate brilliant effort cheers
It's so weird. In the shop; without the hat, he looks so professional. Like a pilot or doctor. Someone you would trust with your life. With that Captain's hat on in that little boat he looks crazy. Like someone you wouldn't trust with a magic marker.
Nicely done. Awesome little project. I've been wanting to build something about that size to use one of my 7.5hp Eska outboards on. They weigh just under 40-lbs.
lol ok Paul i'm thinking of making a real sized KAYAK and see if it can take the ocean wave will let you know if it works great idea thanks i'm thinking 12'x 4' wide should work ok lol thanks again great job and idea you had for fun playing in lakes .two thumps up .
@@kevins1114 Here was a trike I build several years ago. Some day I'll make a better one! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jieBC_bsm58.html