1964 Lyman Sleeper – How To Strip Bottom Paint with Infrared

1964 lyman sleeper stripping bottom paint

There is a new old Lyman sleeper in Vermont! And she’s being prepped for Lake Champlain at Snake Mountain Boatworks.

This barn queen has been “resting” for “several” years. Here RJ and I are using the infrared “Silent Stripper,” which allows us to remove paint down to the wood in one pass without exceeding 600 F. As such, we are protected from any lead vaporization. In fact, as you will see on the floor beneath the boat, the scrapings are dry and in virtual powder form when they release from the wood.

Follow us as we bring Eleanora back to life…

1967 Lyman Cruisette – Emerging from Preservation

1967 lyman cruisette preservation complete

The Drake is a 26′ Lyman Cruisette – Hull # RC1086. The Snake Mountain Boatworks crew spent the winter preserving her to the condition she was in when she left the Sandusky, Ohio factory in 1967. Our biggest challenge was completely rebuilding her deck and gunwale framing, followed by milling out and installing seamed, plank teak decks that matched the specs of her original build sheet. In this video, the Drake is emerging from her winter quarters, gleaming and eager to once again grace the waters of Lake Champlain.

1967 Lyman Cruisette – How to Repair Gunwales Gone Bad

1967 lyman cruisette gunwales gone bad

Lymans, as well as any other antique or classic wooden boats depend upon their gunwales for structural stiffness. Gunwales gone bad translate into a hull that can flex in all the wrong places, get increasingly out of true relative to the keel and ultimately become unseaworthy.

The Lyman Cruisette should have oak gunwale framing comprised of laminated courses. This boat’s framework had been “restored” using chunks of softwood a varying lengths and widths that were pieced in, sometimes not even fastened to anything. We are replacing them completely.

1967 Lyman Cruisette has Landed

1967 lyman cruisette on dollies

Removing the 26′ Lyman Cruisette from its trailer and lowering it onto boat dollies gives us easier access to the boat as we begin installing the new plywood, followed by seamed teak plank decks. It will also give us better access to the boat below its waterline, where we must remove all existing paint and treat the surfaces with Smith’s Penetrating Epoxy Sealer and then apply Lyman tan bottom paint.