Boat Wheels project complete
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Boat Wheels project complete
My Porta Bote is real nice, but there is a lot of stuff to move the water before using it. One way to make this easier is to put the boat together at the car, load it with gear and then roll it to the water. Complete boat, motor, life jackets, fishing tackle, cooler, minnow bucket, everything goes in one trip to the water. And when you are done, every thing goes to the car in one trip. Now Porta Bote sells wheels, but at $250 – ouch!
So the Boat Wheels Project came to be. The boat wheel assemblies are modeled after the ones sold by Porta Bote, only made form wood instead of metal. A bracket holds a wheel at each side of the boat. The Boat Wheel Project has basically 3 parts or sub assemblies for the wheel bracket: an upper bracket half, a ;lower bracket half, and an axle mount. The axle mount is fastened to the lower bracket. The upper and lower bracket halves are put together with bolt and nut/wing nut sets sliding in slots, 2 sets toward the top of the brackets and 2 sets toward the bottom.
After determining the angle needed for fastening the mounting the axles, the axle mounts were made.[ATTACH]18143[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18142[/ATTACH]
Yes that is the bevel cut that was discussed in an earlier thread.
In the second picture the lower bracket, with its foot removed, has screws in place to attach the axle mount.
The next picture shows the upper and lower bracket halves wit the axle mounting block attached to the lower half of the bracket.
[ATTACH]18141[/ATTACH]
Next are pictures of the assembled bracket. These “dry fit” assemblies were mounted on the boat to check out the wheels' angle when mounted. The angles were fine, but found that the slots needed to be lengthened and the lip of the upper bracket half narrower.
[ATTACH]18140[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18139[/ATTACH]
The whole thing was disassembled, corrections made, and put back together...this time with glue. The axles were epoxied in the axle mounts and the bolts (machine screws actually) going between the bracket halves were also epoxied into the upper half brackets. (continued in next post).
So the Boat Wheels Project came to be. The boat wheel assemblies are modeled after the ones sold by Porta Bote, only made form wood instead of metal. A bracket holds a wheel at each side of the boat. The Boat Wheel Project has basically 3 parts or sub assemblies for the wheel bracket: an upper bracket half, a ;lower bracket half, and an axle mount. The axle mount is fastened to the lower bracket. The upper and lower bracket halves are put together with bolt and nut/wing nut sets sliding in slots, 2 sets toward the top of the brackets and 2 sets toward the bottom.
After determining the angle needed for fastening the mounting the axles, the axle mounts were made.[ATTACH]18143[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18142[/ATTACH]
Yes that is the bevel cut that was discussed in an earlier thread.
In the second picture the lower bracket, with its foot removed, has screws in place to attach the axle mount.
The next picture shows the upper and lower bracket halves wit the axle mounting block attached to the lower half of the bracket.
[ATTACH]18141[/ATTACH]
Next are pictures of the assembled bracket. These “dry fit” assemblies were mounted on the boat to check out the wheels' angle when mounted. The angles were fine, but found that the slots needed to be lengthened and the lip of the upper bracket half narrower.
[ATTACH]18140[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18139[/ATTACH]
The whole thing was disassembled, corrections made, and put back together...this time with glue. The axles were epoxied in the axle mounts and the bolts (machine screws actually) going between the bracket halves were also epoxied into the upper half brackets. (continued in next post).
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Sam in Northfield, MN
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
So a little paint and done!
[ATTACH]18145[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18144[/ATTACH]
In the second picture one bracket is extended, or open, and the other is closed.
Sorry, no pics yet of the boat loaded up and headed to the water:D
[ATTACH]18145[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18144[/ATTACH]
In the second picture one bracket is extended, or open, and the other is closed.
Sorry, no pics yet of the boat loaded up and headed to the water:D
- Attachments
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- IMG_0044 (640x598).jpg (251.38 KiB) Viewed 6529 times
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- IMG_0043 (640x480).jpg (222.07 KiB) Viewed 6505 times
Sam in Northfield, MN
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
- JPG
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 34642
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:42 pm
- Location: Lexington, Ky (TAMECAT territory)
Where there is a will. . . .saminmn wrote:So a little paint and done!
[ATTACH]18145[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18144[/ATTACH]
In the second picture one bracket is extended, or open, and the other is closed.
Sorry, no pics yet of the boat loaded up and headed to the water:D
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╟JPG ╢
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
╟JPG ╢
╚═══╝
Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
When I was young, we had a small rowboat we used to carry on my Dad's pickup camper. We had 2 seperate wheels mounted on 1" square aluminum tubing. On the transom of the rowboat we mounted 1 1/4" square tubing for the wheels to slide into. Then when we got the boat off of the camper, we whould slide the wheels into the receivers and wheel it away to the water.
Very simular to your idea.
Worked well until we forgot to pick up the wheels off of the beach one day in Florida. Couldn't figure out what happened to them until we looked at our slides from the trip and saw them laying on the beach.
Very simular to your idea.
Worked well until we forgot to pick up the wheels off of the beach one day in Florida. Couldn't figure out what happened to them until we looked at our slides from the trip and saw them laying on the beach.
Doug
Shopsmith Mark V model 500 upgraded to a model 520, bandsaw, Belt Sander, Jointer, Dewalt DW735 planer, Sand Flee
Shopsmith Mark V model 500 upgraded to a model 520, bandsaw, Belt Sander, Jointer, Dewalt DW735 planer, Sand Flee
I want to thank all for supportive remarks! Thought I did this earlier, but I must have hit preview instead of reply:o
Yes, very satisfying to complete project and even nicer when it comes out good:D
Yes, very satisfying to complete project and even nicer when it comes out good:D
Sam in Northfield, MN
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
A day without beer......could have been better
Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
Re: Boat Wheels project complete
How can I get in touch with you to purchase one that you can make for me
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- Bronze Member
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Mon May 16, 2022 10:33 am
Re: Boat Wheels project complete
saminmn wrote: ↑Thu Aug 09, 2012 2:15 pm My Porta Bote is real nice, but there is a lot of stuff to move the water before using it. One way to make this easier is to put the boat together at the car, load it with gear and then roll it to the water. Complete boat, motor, life jackets, fishing tackle, cooler, minnow bucket, everything goes in one trip to the water. And when you are done, every thing goes to the car in one trip. Now Porta Bote sells wheels, but at $250 – ouch!
So the Boat Wheels Project came to be. The boat wheel assemblies are modeled after the ones sold by Porta Bote, only made form wood instead of metal. A bracket holds a wheel at each side of the boat. The Boat Wheel Project has basically 3 parts or sub assemblies for the wheel bracket: an upper bracket half, a ;lower bracket half, and an axle mount. The axle mount is fastened to the lower bracket. The upper and lower bracket halves are put together with bolt and nut/wing nut sets sliding in slots, 2 sets toward the top of the brackets and 2 sets toward the bottom.
After determining the angle needed for fastening the mounting the axles, the axle mounts were made.[ATTACH]18143[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18142[/ATTACH]
Yes that is the bevel cut that was discussed in an earlier thread.
In the second picture the lower bracket, with its foot removed, has screws in place to attach the axle mount.
The next picture shows the upper and lower bracket halves wit the axle mounting block attached to the lower half of the bracket.
[ATTACH]18141[/ATTACH]
Next are pictures of the assembled bracket. These “dry fit” assemblies were mounted on the boat to check out the wheels' angle when mounted. The angles were fine, but found that the slots needed to be lengthened and the lip of the upper bracket half narrower.
[ATTACH]18140[/ATTACH][ATTACH]18139[/ATTACH]
The whole thing was disassembled, corrections made, and put back together...this time with glue. The axles were epoxied in the axle mounts and the bolts (machine screws actually) going between the bracket halves were also epoxied into the upper half brackets. (continued in next post).
what a wonderful project:)
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- Bronze Member
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Apr 20, 2022 6:14 am
Re: Boat Wheels project complete
Amazing job.
Neat and quick wow
Neat and quick wow