Re: Halloween
Hugo,
I'd like to help but a) I have no scanner and b) I loaned my copy of
the Wolfard book yesterday.
Tartar has a cockpit coaming that runs parallel with the sheer in
profile, with a narrowish side-deck, and a three-pane windscreen.
Halloween has a coaming that runs our to almost the full beam of the
boat aft, and a two-pane screen. Otherwise they look the same to me,
apart from the aforementioned hatch.
Howard
I'd like to help but a) I have no scanner and b) I loaned my copy of
the Wolfard book yesterday.
Tartar has a cockpit coaming that runs parallel with the sheer in
profile, with a narrowish side-deck, and a three-pane windscreen.
Halloween has a coaming that runs our to almost the full beam of the
boat aft, and a two-pane screen. Otherwise they look the same to me,
apart from the aforementioned hatch.
Howard
--- Inbolger@yahoogroups.com, Hugo Tyson <hhetyson@y...> wrote:
> Has anyone got any pictures of "Tartar"?
Hi,
Has anyone got any pictures of "Tartar"?
Hugo Tyson
Howard Stephenson <stephensonhw@...> wrote:
She seems to be almost the same as Tartar. A photo and study plans of
Tartar appear in Bernie Wolfard's old Common Sense Design catalog.
(Warning: buy plans only from Phil Bolger and Friends).
Bolger seems to have used the same hull shape for both, with the main
differences being a) Halloween is meant to be carvel planked over bent
frames and Tartar is to be cold-moulded, and b) Tartar has a forehatch
and different windscreen and coamings.
Howard
Has anyone got any pictures of "Tartar"?
Hugo Tyson
Howard Stephenson <stephensonhw@...> wrote:
She seems to be almost the same as Tartar. A photo and study plans of
Tartar appear in Bernie Wolfard's old Common Sense Design catalog.
(Warning: buy plans only from Phil Bolger and Friends).
Bolger seems to have used the same hull shape for both, with the main
differences being a) Halloween is meant to be carvel planked over bent
frames and Tartar is to be cold-moulded, and b) Tartar has a forehatch
and different windscreen and coamings.
Howard
--- Inbolger@yahoogroups.com, "r_m_arctic" <r_m_arctic@y...> wrote:
>The design is called
> Halloween and is a 25'6" x 6'10" power boat. It has likely been
>built by now.
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
She seems to be almost the same as Tartar. A photo and study plans of
Tartar appear in Bernie Wolfard's old Common Sense Design catalog.
(Warning: buy plans only from Phil Bolger and Friends).
Bolger seems to have used the same hull shape for both, with the main
differences being a) Halloween is meant to be carvel planked over bent
frames and Tartar is to be cold-moulded, and b) Tartar has a forehatch
and different windscreen and coamings.
Howard
Tartar appear in Bernie Wolfard's old Common Sense Design catalog.
(Warning: buy plans only from Phil Bolger and Friends).
Bolger seems to have used the same hull shape for both, with the main
differences being a) Halloween is meant to be carvel planked over bent
frames and Tartar is to be cold-moulded, and b) Tartar has a forehatch
and different windscreen and coamings.
Howard
--- Inbolger@yahoogroups.com, "r_m_arctic" <r_m_arctic@y...> wrote:
>The design is called
> Halloween and is a 25'6" x 6'10" power boat. It has likely been
>built by now.
"In the end she was not built, but I am still of the opinion that the
design is one of the best I ever made". Was Philip C. Bolger writing
about the Gloucester Light Dory? Dovekie? or Yonder? No. See his
first book...SmallBoats...pages 177-179. The design is called
Halloween and is a 25'6" x 6'10" power boat. It has likely been built
by now. It deserves to be built often and should be examined before a
building decision on a design of this size and capability. Take a
trip to the Public Library for a look. My librarian tells me that
Bolger's five design books are hugely popular and circulate constantly
here in Anchorage, Alaska.
Rollin dalPiaz, Yonder was designed for me and I am saving to have it
built commerically. If I wanted a power boat, I'd fund construction of
Halloween.
design is one of the best I ever made". Was Philip C. Bolger writing
about the Gloucester Light Dory? Dovekie? or Yonder? No. See his
first book...SmallBoats...pages 177-179. The design is called
Halloween and is a 25'6" x 6'10" power boat. It has likely been built
by now. It deserves to be built often and should be examined before a
building decision on a design of this size and capability. Take a
trip to the Public Library for a look. My librarian tells me that
Bolger's five design books are hugely popular and circulate constantly
here in Anchorage, Alaska.
Rollin dalPiaz, Yonder was designed for me and I am saving to have it
built commerically. If I wanted a power boat, I'd fund construction of
Halloween.