Splake wrote:
Well... I was doing some patching on my cedar strip this summer and thought I might have to buy another batch of West Systems resin and hardener. That would have been C$300 just for the epoxy.
So .... if this reclamation requires buying the epoxy plus the glass plus other parts plus shipping, then my guesstimate is that it would be heading closer to C$500 or more. These days $600 (including the initial $100 for the hull as is) for a working canoe is still a pretty good deal.
Given the # of cracks showing, I would also be thinking about adding a new layer of fibreglass (being the better choice than Kevlar for the outer layer) over the whole hull in addition to the individual patches. Maybe that's overdoing it.
If it needed another layer of cloth, even lightweigh S-glass, that is going to add considerable weight to a 17’ canoe and might be a project killer for me, not just the weight but the cost and labor. I’ve done it on a rare-ish composite canoe, a UV trashed Kevlar Blue Hole Starburst. It wasn’t worth it, the Starburst kept cracking in new places every time I used it.
I’m glad someone else took a shot at estimating costs. Without seeing the hull first hand and having a refurbishment plan the cost of repairs is a total guessing game.
“Worst case” (most expensive) scenario, in USD
New Gunwales. Two piece aluminum gunwales $160 a pair. And $250 shipping.
https://northwestcanoe.com/shop/ols/pro ... um-gunwaleOh, and deck caps that fit the aluminum outwales. Two winky end caps, if you can find ones with the correct angle, $40.
OK, not aluminum. Provided you have a table saw and helper you can buy an plank of ash and DIY wood gunwales. You would need an 18’ board, minimum 4” wide, 6” better if you want wood for DIY seat frames and thwarts. Hereabouts that is at least $100, and they aren’t shipping an 18’ x 6” ash board, so pick up only. Strap an extension ladder to your roof racks before you go.
The simplest wood gunwale solution would be to buy a scarfed knock-down set. $300 plus some wood to DIY deck plates.
https://northwestcanoe.com/shop/ols/pro ... IT-18F-KNCEd’s Canoe sells Knock-down wood gunwales run $250 for 18’ lengths, but they are left square, not rounded. A little elbow grease will round off the right angle edges.
https://www.edscanoe.com/14kndogusy.htmlEasiest non-DIY brightwork solution would be to buy a “Complete Repair Package” from Ed’s with seats, hangers, yoke, thwarts, carry handles and hardware. $150.
https://www.edscanoe.com/corepa.htmlEpoxy, cloth and peel ply are best bought together from the same vendor to save shipping costs. Prices below are from Jamestown Distributors.
https://www.jamestowndistributors.com/homeQuart of epoxy resin, $50. Half pint of hardener, $13, enough for patches. A yard of fiberglass, enough for patches, $10. A yard of peel ply, enough to cover the glass patches, $13.
Call the mimimum epoxy and cloth $100 with shipping.
Paint to make it pretty. Rustoleum is the least expensive Topside paint, $30 a quart. Or just plain Rustoleum enamel, $17. Rolled and tipped a quart will do two coats in a 17’ canoe. Topside is worth the 2X cost if you are spending the effort to paint.
Incidentals and disposables; oil and varnish for gunwales and brightwork, paint brushes, roller sleeves, tape, sand paper and sanding disks, gloves, acetone for boo boos. That stuff adds up a lot faster than you might think. Call it another $50
What’s the running total so far?
Knock down gunwales - $250
Complete Repair Package - $150
Jamestown epoxy, cloth and peel ply - $100
Rustoleum Topside - $30
Disposables - $50
$580 total. I knew there was a reason I didn’t like calculating those costs. I guarantee I forgot some things, maybe some G/flex, D-rings, rope, cord, bungee. Ca-ching.
Splake wrote:
(Side note: Scoping out someone else's project is almost as much fun as planning my own and a whole lot less expensive.

)
Indeed. If I took all of the costs into consideration I might never repair another canoe.
I did minor repairs and major outfitting on a bro-in-law’s canoe. He tried to give me $20 when I was done. Puh-freaking-lease. For starters that was two solid days work; I haven’t worked for $1.25 an hour since I was 12. I said “No thanks, my pleasure”. He left me a twenty. I mailed him ten two dollar bills.
FWIW, hereabouts places willing to do repairs and outfitting start at $65 an hour. The really pro folks charge $85 and up an hour.
I didn’t tell him but later, just for funsies, I totaled up every penny; new seat, hangers and thwarts, D-rings, lacing cord and painter lines, epoxy and cloth quantities, down to indiviudal brushes, pairs of dispoasble gloves, sheets of sandpaper/RO disks, etc.
It was close to $200 just in parts and pieces.
There is an old saying “If you want to make a million dollars in the canoe business start with two milllion”. With the caveat that I know some semi-skeezy flipper repairers who buy low, do the absolute minimum and eventually sell high, that adage may apply to refurbishing derelicts as well.
All that said I’d probably still fix the Gillies.