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#1
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The teardown started with eveything coming off. The console was mounted to a skid and put on a moveable platform to assist with filling all of the holes and fairing out the dips and divots.
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#2
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As always this was the least fun. Since we needed to remove 2.5" of vertical height from the bracket it was easier to tear down from the outside not the inside. We rebuilt the transom with Koosa Bluewater 26 and vinylester resin. Tearing the old plywood out would have been miserable without air chisels and a bunch of people switching off when their arms nearly fell off.
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#3
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Rebuilding the console turned out to be a bigger project than thought (Imagine that... a Seacraft that takes more work than thought.) One of the old owners thought it was a good idea to cut out the entire face of the console. That had to change but was a nightmare to fair into the remainder of the console. The holes for the hardtop went away as a new one is in the works. Re-wiring was a necessity and thanks to my father for pitching in and completing all of the rewire.
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#4
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Instead of boring eveyone with the details of how the rebuild process went along, here are a bunch of photos of the finished product. She's nice but still needs a few tweaks to make her just right. A new hardtop is being made as light as we can get it and some serious tweaks to the transom area to allow either seating or a kill box for whatever activity the day would entail.
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