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Old 10-25-2011, 08:44 AM   #1
William Novotny
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gear storage solution?

The main problem I have with the "Big Red Squid" is my lack of gear storage space. I saw this and talked to the guy that makes them. Its a fishing system for SUP's and I thought that it would mount well behind the seat on the bungie deck space. The only problem is the crown down the center line of my yak. I was hopeing someone with that inner macgyver would have some ideas for building something like this that I could do inexpensively at home. The guy that makes these does a great job but I can't afford the 250 these systems cost.
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Old 10-25-2011, 09:26 AM   #2
pchen911
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"Inner Macgyver"
LOL..

$250 for 2 scotty rod holders and a pelican box?! Crazy.

Just mount the scotty bases directly on the boat. ($25 each). Or better yet, mount a couple of flush mounts at $9 each.
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Old 10-25-2011, 11:36 AM   #3
William Novotny
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Haha I totally agree. I'm not even focusing on the holders, just a way to mount a base to turn a crowned surface into a flat surface to secure a box to. Doesn't even have to be a dry box. I was considering mounting 2 stainless rails about 20" apart, almost like a roof rack ontop of a car. That way I could lay something flat across and bungie it down.
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Old 10-25-2011, 11:40 AM   #4
William Novotny
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LOL..

$250 for 2 scotty rod holders and a pelican box?! Crazy.

Just mount the scotty bases directly on the boat. ($25 each). Or better yet, mount a couple of flush mounts at $9 each.
And its my personal opinion that SUP's are way overpriced and I don't expect any less from a sup accessory
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Old 10-25-2011, 03:08 PM   #5
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Hey Will, my buddy had a similar storage problem with his Necky Dolphin...A standard crate just wouldnt fit.

He built this out of a dishpan, some PVC pipe (heated and pushed on a wine bottle for the openings) and a piece of metal acrossed the part where he mounted the rod holders to add stability. With the crown yours has you may need to add something to shim up the side gaps before you strap it down.

This is the best pic I could find to blow up the "crate/pan".
Probably cost him less than $20.
Hope it helps. Good luck.
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Old 10-25-2011, 07:21 PM   #6
William Novotny
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Hey Will, my buddy had a similar storage problem with his Necky Dolphin...A standard crate just wouldnt fit.

He built this out of a dishpan, some PVC pipe (heated and pushed on a wine bottle for the openings) and a piece of metal acrossed the part where he mounted the rod holders to add stability. With the crown yours has you may need to add something to shim up the side gaps before you strap it down.

This is the best pic I could find to blow up the "crate/pan".
Probably cost him less than $20.
Hope it helps. Good luck.
Hey Gary! Yeah before anything I need to shim the back to raise the plain above the crown like you said. I'm gonna look for a really shallow sturdy box and rig it up. I was gonna try a crate but I'm worried about having stuff stowed that high above water level. The lack of a tankwell is a real pain but I'm trying to work around it and overcome. I'm getting the most out off this yaks strong points so ill tinker and enjoy it till I get something better.
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Old 10-25-2011, 07:35 PM   #7
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It sounds like all you really need to figure out is how to mount your Pelican box. It's pretty easy, just use an angle gauge (Home Depot has them) to figure out the angle of your hull, then use some plastic of an appropriate width, thickness, and length, as a spacer from your topside to being level with or just above your crown and bolt through using some 5200 or the like.

However, if your installing a battery box, you might want to think about mounting it inside the yak, to as you stated, keep the center of gravity low.
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Old 10-25-2011, 07:46 PM   #8
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It sounds like all you really need to figure out is how to mount your Pelican box. It's pretty easy, just use an angle gauge (Home Depot has them) to figure out the angle of your hull, then use some plastic of an appropriate width, thickness, and length, as a spacer from your topside to being level with or just above your crown and bolt through using some 5200 or the like.

However, if your installing a battery box, you might want to think about mounting it inside the yak, to as you stated, keep the center of gravity low.
Not for a battery box, just gear storage. When I get my finder all will be ran and mounted inside.just need someplace to keep tackle and tools. And leave enough space for a couple flush mounts. But good info on the angle gauge. Probably a dumb question but what is 5200? I'm guessing its a grade of stainless but I'm a laymen when it comes to this stuff.
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Old 10-25-2011, 07:52 PM   #9
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3M 5200 is a marine caulking.
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Old 10-25-2011, 08:06 PM   #10
William Novotny
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Gotcha. I've got marine goop is that the same or is the goop just an adhesive?
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