A few months ago i bought(for next to nothing) a 1981 Formula F233 Fisherman, is the one with the bigger cockpit. Boat was .................. well, just the boat, no motor, no outdrive, no gimbal, just the steering wheel, gauges, a morse control and about 60-80 gallons of fuel. The boat was sitting for 12 years collecting a LOT of rain water. So I bought a new aluminum trailer with disc brakes on both axles and went to Virginia to pick her up knowing what i'm going to see and what i'm gonna face in the future, but that's what i wanted, i wanted to restore this old girl back to new making her much much better than what she was. As soon as i got the boat start to rip everything apart. I started ripping the floor and remove at least 16 garbage bags of "closed cell" foam, which BTW was saturated(the bottom 2") with water and GAS in the gas compartment. Well everything went well with the ripping apart business BUT the fuel tank. I had empty the tank way before i start ripping apart, so my next thing to do was to remove the tank. For about 2-3 weeks the tank refuses to come out. I'm embarrassed to say that i CAN NOT remove it. Is been sitting in a bed of foam covering everything, bottom, sides and top. I removed all the foam except from the bottom and still can't remove it. I removed the port side stringer to try and pry from the side, but does not budge. My next choice is to start cutting it in pieces with a grinder. My concern is sparks though. Even though the tank is empty and does not smell gas at all, is it going to be safe to start cutting it? I've restored a few boats in the past and never EVER had a problem like this.
Any way here are some pictures from day one to today.
Oh, BTW, when i removed the stringer i noticed that it was a space of 1 inch under the stringer, yes, the stringer was "floating", never saw that before. Also the stringer was made by using 2 pieces of 3/4 lumber stocked on top of each over to make the height and was STAPLED together.
Also this is my "accident" during the resto process.
Any way here are some pictures from day one to today.
Oh, BTW, when i removed the stringer i noticed that it was a space of 1 inch under the stringer, yes, the stringer was "floating", never saw that before. Also the stringer was made by using 2 pieces of 3/4 lumber stocked on top of each over to make the height and was STAPLED together.
Also this is my "accident" during the resto process.