- A Viking Funeral
Ron Blower’s Viking Funeral
My friend Ron unfortunately died when he was just in his early 60’s. Ron was among other things, a talented artist. His wife Donna is just as creative, and she sent Ron off in the Old Way. Above are Viking metal figures ...
Read more - About My Northwest
A few thoughts about my Northwest….
Occasionally I get an overwhelming urge to again see some of the old time northwest things I was raised around and which are so rapidly disappearing, so get in an old Dodge pickup truck I own and drive over to ...
Read more - Articulated Rudders
Ross Anderson didn’t install a bow thruster in his 45-Plus DUCK. Instead, he went for the “Articulated Rudder” shown here. Ross can cut donuts with the boat, bringing it into very tight situations without problems. Of course he also knows what he’s doing but just ...
Read more - Backup Sailing Rig
You’ll commonly read about “emergency propulsion systems.” They take the form of “wing” engines, hydraulic drives, belts off gen plants, and other things that all share in common the dependence on some machine. I don’t go for that. If I’m further from land than I ...
Read more - Before Ordering A New Boat Think About This
8/4/07
Things To Think About Before Ordering A New Boat
A recent letter gave me pause. The guy asked, if he commissioned a new boat from a shipyard, how could he know if he was getting a well built boat? That’s a very fair question, regardless if ...
Read more - Bilge Keels
Bilge Keels to Dampen Roll ?
The following is my reply to a guy who is having a new 462 DUCK built and asked me about fins, or “bilge keels,”as they’re called, to dampen roll. I don’t think much of the idea!Since I get this question ...
Read more - Boatbuilding Shelter
Some sort of shelter from the weather is nice to have, especially with wood boats. My Building Book describes building a visqueen covered shed but the problem with it is that if you live in snow country, it can cave in unless you have a ...
Read more - Bulb Bows
Bulbous Bows?
I get an awful lot of mail asking about putting bulbous bows on my designs. I personally have always thought they were strictly hype for small boats. The cost to build them is far more than simply adding a couple feet to the hull, ...
Read more - CARITAS
CARITAS was a grand motoryacht from New York that ended up on the west coast. During WW11 she was seized by the government and used for coast patrol. After the war she kicked about, and in the late 1950s, a guy bought her and dragged ...
Read more - Cutlass Bearings & Shaft Logs
More about Cutlass Bearings & Shaft Logs
In the previous chat about shaft logs, I went through a long description of inserting a dowel or pipe in the main pipe shaft log, sliding the cutlass bearing over that, then filling the area with Chock fast Orange ...
Read more - Cutting Disks
I’m frequently asked about “NC” or “Cutting” Disks. This refers to a computer disk that can be inserted into a machine, which then burns out every piece of the boat, delivering you a pile of steel that all you have to do is weld it ...
Read more - Displacement Hull Inboard Rudders
Rudder design and steering systems are a big deal nowadays but actually, are nothing new. Really, once design went from the steering oar off the stern quarter to an actual rudder attached to the back, there wasn’t much more to do!
Of course there’s variations of ...
Read more - Engine Room Temperature
Dry Stack & Engine Room Temperatures
10 years or so ago a new fiberglass fishing boat in Seattle, on its maiden trip, suddenly caught fire in the engine room. The crew ran her on the beach and were OK, but the boat was destroyed. The cause ...
Read more - Estimating Materials Costs
Estimating costs
I’m frequently asked materials costs of one of my designs. I don’t have a clue and if I did, I still wouldn’t tell you because I wouldn’t want to steer you wrong. Some of you might remember a franchise home builder/designer who sold “packages”that ...
Read more - Filters
Fuel Filter Installation Tip
My friend Jim used to work on seagoing tugs and whatnot; big boats. He and I were out fishing aboard his old28′ Bayliner with a Yamar 27 HP diesel outboard and I noticed how he did the fuel filter. Installed AFTER the ...
Read more - Fuel Filter Installation Tip
My friend Jim used to work on seagoing tugs and whatnot; big boats. He and I were out fishing aboard his old 28′ Bayliner with a Yamar 27 HP diesel outboard and I noticed how he did the fuel filter. Installed AFTER the filter is ...
Read more - Fuel Tank Drains
Diesel Fuel Tanks
I got this interesting letter from Peter Eikenberry, an ex-US Coast Guard guy working with vessel standards. He points out that my perception that all fuel tanks had to exhaust (drain)from the top did NOT apply to diesel! This is good news because ...
Read more - George’s Turkey Visit
11/17/08 Link to the 41-Plus Diesel duck
Visiting Imir
My beautiful friend Arzu and I, having dinner.
In October, 2008, I braved the trip from our quiet Island home to the Seattle airport. After more hours than I care to spend again soon, I landed in Istanbul, Turkey. ...
Read more - Glassing Large Hulls
A common question I get is how in the world are you supposed to put an epoxy coating on a large plywood hull that’s sitting upright? The fear is that the resin will all run off, the cloth will slide off, and the result will ...
Read more - Ideas being worked on
Stuff Being Thought About……
There’s usually new stuff being at least talked about here, sometimes even being worked up. I used to post some of them on this page but then I changed my mind, and decided to add them to the main sites when (or ...
Read more - Junk Rig Comments
I met Alex Burton at one of the early Pt. Townsend wooden boat shows, I think maybe 1980? He had one of the neatest boats I’ve ever seen, built on the beach up in British Columbia with a lot of driftwood. It looked straight out ...
Read more - Lam Sails
I’m pleased to be working with Dennis Lam, of Lam Sails. Founded in Hong Kong in the early 1960’s, Lam Sails have become one of the largest lofts in the world with over 1500 employees at this writing. They make cruising and racing sails for ...
Read more - Learning to Weld
GETTING STARTED IN WELDING; 3 welders yakking.
Here’s my friend Darold Brekke, third andLast generation of the Brekke Metal Company, shown here as the1982 Ballard Calendar Pin-up boy. He’s working a forge in this photo. If you don’t know what Ballard is, well, today it’s mostly ...
Read more - New designs at George Buehler Yacht Design
12/30/2011
What’s New?
New designs completed are a wood version of the 49′ GULNAR’E. I raised the sheer some and added a small deckhouse aft. There’s also two schooner versions, and a center cockpit version. I have to post her drawings one of these days but in ...
Read more - Polyester Resin on Plywood
Polyester Resin and Plywood
Everybody who has been around boat yards since the 70’s is familiar with old home made plywood trimarans (usually but not always) with the fiberglass falling off in big sheets. As a result, polyester resin has got a bad rep as a ...
Read more - Powerboat Sailing Rig
(4/01/01)
A common question I get is a variation on….”hey; the sail rig on the DUCKS and the other powerboats you show with one mast looks weird; the mast is to far back. The headsail luff is raked to much and the foot overlaps the side ...
Read more - Reduction Gears
Reduction Gear and Propeller Guesstimates….
My “theory” on prop sizing is that a prop and a reduction gear need to be chosen for the specific USE of the boat. I did an informal study of salmon trollers for sale to see what, if any, was a ...
Read more - Sail Designs
Big Mel, a B&B and charter boat, in Holland
Jolly Bear is an OLGA
Just Imagine is a steel OTTER
Read more - Self- Bailing Pilot House
When the fleets of little fishing boats were large here on the west coast we’d occasionally see a boat with the windows knocked out. “Occasionally” is to strong a word; rather, once in a great while we’d hear of it. Thinking back, you know I ...
Read more - Steel Hull Keel Coolers
Keel Cooling an Engine in a Steel Hull.
A closed freshwater cooling system for a steel hull is pretty simple. It can be essentially just two heavy channel or half-pipe sections, welded to the side of the keel. A wood or glass hull will of course ...
Read more - Steering Systems
The simplest and least expensive steering system is a stick attached to the rudder. But that usually means sitting out in a cockpit when you drive and that can be miserable, so many people, especially with power boats, want some sort of a steering system. ...
Read more - The Cutter Sailplan
Thoughts about Sailplans and why I like Cutters for cruising
Most of my sailplans are moderate aspect, with multiple reefs, straight leach mains without battens so you can easily reef without the need to turn the bow into the wind, self-tending headsails; heavily and simply rigged. ...
Read more - Thoughts about Steel Boatbuilding
Steel is hard, cold, dirty, heavy, difficult, and noisy to work. It is also cheap, available everywhere in the world, incredibly strong so hard to damage (when you build to “stout,” not “theoretically strong enough” scantling sizes) but easy to repair if you do damage ...
Read more - Troller Yacht Concept
The “Troller” (not Trawler) Yacht Concept
This is condensed down from a couple chapters in my book The Troller Yacht Book, Norton Publishing, available mail order from me or from better bookstores anywhere. I suggest if what you read here makes sense to you then read the ...
Read more - Welding Sequence
Back in the 1970s or 80s (I forget) a new crab boat was launched near Seattle. It got maybe 50 miles from the dock on its maiden run to Alaska when suddenly a plate or two “blew” off and she sank. The reason was the ...
Read more - What I said about That
This page is a “discussion,” one sided I admit since it’s just me doing the talking, about various ideas and things I was thinking about or answers questions I get in letters and was to lazy to write several times over. Now allI need to ...
Read more - Wood Construction
Here’s a few drawings showing typical wood construction details from my plans. Wood boats are still perfectly valid, and while they suffer from poor resale value and can be harder to sell than steel or plastic, they have a lot of good points. This isn’t ...
Read more - Wood Decks on Steel Hulls
I am an unrepentant Wood Boat Man. I like steel fine, and I can see the place for all other materials but given my druthers I’ll always go with wood. However, in larger sizes, if costs are an issue in most cases steel makes far ...
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