Outboard Powered Trawlers/w.Pics

Forgot to include the lovely Cape Dory built on the lobster hull design: not exactly a dory as we would think of them.

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The Cape Dory folk originally built small sailboats, with the first being a 10' dinghy, hence maybe this is where the Dory part of their name came from (?)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Dory_Yachts

Re the nice Cape Dory mobo in your photos, I saw a very similar boat in Bermuda 6 years ago :

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And re the New England lobster boats, here are a few photos of a very typical example that found its way to Barbados, where she is now engaged in commercial deep sea fishing rather than lobstering. Her owner was telling me that he drove her down here from Maine via Bermuda, taking about 9 days non-stop from Bermuda to Barbados, approx 1,300 miles.

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Getting back to the title in the OP re outboard powered trawlers, I suppose you could say that this is one, as she has O/B's and has displacement hulls - however because her L/B ratio on the waterline is about 15 (rather than the usual for monohulls which is around 3), she can still do over 20 knots in displacement mode with 2 x 150 hp, for a length overall of 15 m.

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It's amazing that the lobster boat hull is so seaworthy, it has a totally flat stern with zero deadrise!!! In some ways this is similar to the Nelson design, fine bow entry with round bilge, tapering to a very shallow flat stern. The problem with these types of hulls is the huge amount of power thats needed to push them above the mid teens because of the drag created by the huge keel.


I love over your cat design; that's what I call a flat deck! :) here in the uk even big 80' planing boats like Fairline have steps between the helm and cockpit; how do you get to the helm without tripping over when you're a bit tipsy? :D
 
Just a few thoughts:

the Sam Devlin boats are lovely, but who wants to spend 3 years gluing bits of plywood together with epoxy; that's just to complete the hull! And then you have a very vulnerable hull that will rot with the slightest scratch when water gets into the ply laminations.

so I was thinking: is there a ready made GRP hull which has the old fashioned look of his boats. I know you can get a custom lobster boat made in the states, but they seem to cost a fortune to build. Maybe it's because custom=big bucks.

i came across these pretty hulls that are built in Northern France, proper work boat heritage; pretty traditional design with a moulded in stem post.:)

I'm guessing that they sell hull mouldings to fishermen; but there are lots of these 9mtr boats for sale second hand set up for day angling if you wished to save the effort of fitting out a hull moulding yourself.


The Rhea 900 timonier fishing boat S/D hull....


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My plan would be to buy a new hull moulding; about £1k/ ft...
fit a reconditioned Cummins 6bt 330hp diesel. $15k ex states.( actually brand new engine built in Mexico)
build a plywood wheel house.
fit home made windows.
have a traditional interior with bare floor boards.
No fitted furniture, just free standing chairs and couches (screwed to floor)
extended hard top to reach nearly to the transom.

Very traditional wood fit out interior in other words.

'cockpit door galley' would be the only fixed furniture: like this.



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Oi Rusty......

You seem to have neglected the market leader in Trawlers

:encouragement::encouragement::encouragement:

Tom


:D:D;)

I thought I would break new ground with the Limey's and show some less well know American boats!

Of course the big daddy of them all is ..........guess what?:o
 
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Oi Rusty......

You seem to have neglected the market leader in Trawlers

:encouragement::encouragement::encouragement:

Tom


I'd is love to own a boat like yours, but however nice a wooden hull is, the maintenance would be a no go area for me personally; but if I could drop a wooden boat into a GRP hull that would be the ultimate.

i just can't make myself buy one of those plastic 'go faster' monstrosities they call boats nowadays.

would you live in a plastic house ?
 
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