Hi all.
I recently found a very dilapidated original Haines V15 on a trailer without a motor. It was in pretty terrible condition, but I thought it was worth giving it a 2nd chance.
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These little boats were a direct copy of the Bertram V15 (but for the flooding keel), that Haines used to build under license for Bertram Australia and were the forerunner of the Haines V16.
When I got it home, I cleaned it out and had a good look at the ugly:
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Someone had already had a go at replacing the transom, but it was such a poor effort that I decided to do it again from scratch. For some reason, the "repairer" decided to cut off the back deck to get access to the transom, but then cut the back skin off and replaced it from the outside. Just a rubbish job and the perpetrator obviously knew it, as She sat in the open for long enough for the new work to begin rotting! So I pulled up the floor which had also been replaced, to discover a whole new world of Jerry build.
Instead of replacing the stringers, raw meranti timber was roof screwed to the rotten original stringers. There was nothing to bite into, just the original poorly rolled fiberglass skin, as the original timber has disappeared. The hull was pretty badly banana'd, so I put the boat onto a cradle, set up a bimini frame to carry a tarp, and set to work.
IMG_3795.jpg You can see where the rot had attacked the "new" transom.
IMG_3809(1).jpg I ended up removing the inner skin as well, and set up a braced melamine mold to rebuild the transom from the outside in.
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Poly resin and marine ply transom.
Next, lots of grinding: