ive just purchased this boat from ebay and plan to get it back into water,it has a really old motor in it and wonder if I can fit a speed controller to it,it has three connections. one for pos and two for neg can anyone help
{"text":"ive just purchased this boat from ebay and plan to get it back into water,it has a really old motor in it and wonder if I can fit a speed controller to it,it has three connections. one for pos and two for neg can anyone help","subject":"renovation of 48\" fire boat","media":[{"id":"1254850412","name":"1254850412.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850412/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850412/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1254850413","name":"1254850413.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850413/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850413/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1254850414","name":"1254850414.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850414/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850414/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1254850415","name":"1254850415.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850415/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1254850415/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
ive just purchased this boat from ebay and plan to get it back into water,it has a really old motor in it and wonder if I can fit a speed controller to it,it has three connections. one for pos and two for neg can anyone help
Boat is a wood kit built in the 1960 by a friend,built and stored in a shed.needs alot of TLC,doing my best to make it fit for the lake ,have rebuilt all of the superstructure.Was powerd by a lead acid battery/500 motor .Now powerd by a GP.7.2vNiCd 2000 Mah.And a cheap 50amp controller bought from Hong Kong on Ebay.Needs a lot more work to be done and been testing it at Newbrighton wirral.Thanks for watching.Gerry
{"text":"Boat is a wood kit built in the 1960 by a friend,built and stored in a shed.needs alot of TLC,doing my best to make it fit for the lake ,have rebuilt all of the superstructure.Was powerd by a lead acid battery/500 motor .Now powerd by a GP.7.2vNiCd 2000 Mah.And a cheap 50amp controller bought from Hong Kong on Ebay.Needs a lot more work to be done and been testing it at Newbrighton wirral.Thanks for watching.Gerry","subject":"My SRTTL","media":[],"youtubeUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8oE2fij6b0"}
Boat is a wood kit built in the 1960 by a friend,built and stored in a shed.needs alot of TLC,doing my best to make it fit for the lake ,have rebuilt all of the superstructure.Was powerd by a lead acid battery/500 motor .Now powerd by a GP.7.2vNiCd 2000 Mah.And a cheap 50amp controller bought from Hong Kong on Ebay.Needs a lot more work to be done and been testing it at Newbrighton wirral.Thanks for watching.Gerry
This is my Sea Hornet which was rescued from Ebay see photo 1. Gray (Froggyt996) recognised it as a Sea Hornet even with the hideous cabin attched which the prvious owner had made. Also see the propshaft angle in photo 1 - would this have ever worked? Gray again restored this for me, I wanted a mahogany boat which looked like an italian speedboat and this is what he did for me see photo 2. Photo 3 sees the Sea Hornet on the sea at Southsea just after the start of the Round Britain Race in 2008. The receiver battery failed and a very nice Lifeboat Man from Southsea happened to be watching me run the boat and rescued it when it stopped running. it was put in dry dock over this winter to be tidied up again after a couple of years constant use and photo 4 sees it with its 2 new screens, re-varnished and 2 new rubbing strake. it is powered by 2 Graupner Speed 600 motors, a Ripmax sea sprint watercooled speed controller and 2 x 3 blade prop shop props on 2 x light weight shafts. it is also filled with bouyancy foam it case the inevitable happens which makes it quite heavy. it is ran on 2 x 8.4 volts nicad sticks and gives me a running time of approx. 20 minutes with quite a good turn of speed.
Marie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)
{"text":"This is my Sea Hornet which was rescued from Ebay see photo 1. Gray (Froggyt996) recognised it as a Sea Hornet even with the hideous cabin attched which the prvious owner had made. Also see the propshaft angle in photo 1 - would this have ever worked? Gray again restored this for me, I wanted a mahogany boat which looked like an italian speedboat and this is what he did for me see photo 2. Photo 3 sees the Sea Hornet on the sea at Southsea just after the start of the Round Britain Race in 2008. The receiver battery failed and a very nice Lifeboat Man from Southsea happened to be watching me run the boat and rescued it when it stopped running. it was put in dry dock over this winter to be tidied up again after a couple of years constant use and photo 4 sees it with its 2 new screens, re-varnished and 2 new rubbing strake. it is powered by 2 Graupner Speed 600 motors, a Ripmax sea sprint watercooled speed controller and 2 x 3 blade prop shop props on 2 x light weight shafts. it is also filled with bouyancy foam it case the inevitable happens which makes it quite heavy. it is ran on 2 x 8.4 volts nicad sticks and gives me a running time of approx. 20 minutes with quite a good turn of speed.\r\nMarie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)","subject":"Aerokits Sea Hornet (Riva version)","media":[{"id":"1235227265","name":"1235227265.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227265/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227265/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235227266","name":"1235227266.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227266/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227266/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235227267","name":"1235227267.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227267/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227267/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235227268","name":"1235227268.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227268/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235227268/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
This is my Sea Hornet which was rescued from Ebay see photo 1. Gray (Froggyt996) recognised it as a Sea Hornet even with the hideous cabin attched which the prvious owner had made. Also see the propshaft angle in photo 1 - would this have ever worked? Gray again restored this for me, I wanted a mahogany boat which looked like an italian speedboat and this is what he did for me see photo 2. Photo 3 sees the Sea Hornet on the sea at Southsea just after the start of the Round Britain Race in 2008. The receiver battery failed and a very nice Lifeboat Man from Southsea happened to be watching me run the boat and rescued it when it stopped running. it was put in dry dock over this winter to be tidied up again after a couple of years constant use and photo 4 sees it with its 2 new screens, re-varnished and 2 new rubbing strake. it is powered by 2 Graupner Speed 600 motors, a Ripmax sea sprint watercooled speed controller and 2 x 3 blade prop shop props on 2 x light weight shafts. it is also filled with bouyancy foam it case the inevitable happens which makes it quite heavy. it is ran on 2 x 8.4 volts nicad sticks and gives me a running time of approx. 20 minutes with quite a good turn of speed.
Marie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)
Hi" there, I like your sea hornet " You have done a brilliant restoration job on it 👍 . What was the last owner thinking of when he put that propshaft in and that hatch cover on the top 😯 ?
Anyway I have just bought one like this and looking forward in restoreing mine too !! Hopefully it should look as good as yours !
Albert .
Hi" there, I like your sea hornet " You have done a brilliant restoration job on it 👍 . What was the last owner thinking of when he put that propshaft in and that hatch cover on the top 😯 ?
Anyway I have just bought one like this and looking forward in restoreing mine too !! Hopefully it should look as good as yours !
Albert .
This is my Aerokits Solent Class Lifeboat that was rescued from Ebay as a wreck see photo's 1 & 2. This was then lovingly restored for me by Gray (Froggyt996). First he had to skin one third of the hull as only two thirds had been skinned. He then had to use copious amounts of filler to make the hull its correct shape see photo 3, instead of the stepped hull as per the original Aerokits build. He then had to put the superstructure together as it had fell apart whilst being posted to us as it had been put together with a hot glue gun yuk!!!!!! Next started the painting as shown in photo 4. Please see my next post for the next stages of its rebuild.
Marie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)
{"text":"This is my Aerokits Solent Class Lifeboat that was rescued from Ebay as a wreck see photo's 1 & 2. This was then lovingly restored for me by Gray (Froggyt996). First he had to skin one third of the hull as only two thirds had been skinned. He then had to use copious amounts of filler to make the hull its correct shape see photo 3, instead of the stepped hull as per the original Aerokits build. He then had to put the superstructure together as it had fell apart whilst being posted to us as it had been put together with a hot glue gun yuk!!!!!! Next started the painting as shown in photo 4. Please see my next post for the next stages of its rebuild.\r\nMarie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)","subject":"Aerokits Solent Clas Lifeboat - Douglas Currie","media":[{"id":"1235223723","name":"1235223723.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223723/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223723/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235223724","name":"1235223724.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223724/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223724/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235223725","name":"1235223725.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223725/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223725/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1235223726","name":"1235223726.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223726/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1235223726/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
This is my Aerokits Solent Class Lifeboat that was rescued from Ebay as a wreck see photo's 1 & 2. This was then lovingly restored for me by Gray (Froggyt996). First he had to skin one third of the hull as only two thirds had been skinned. He then had to use copious amounts of filler to make the hull its correct shape see photo 3, instead of the stepped hull as per the original Aerokits build. He then had to put the superstructure together as it had fell apart whilst being posted to us as it had been put together with a hot glue gun yuk!!!!!! Next started the painting as shown in photo 4. Please see my next post for the next stages of its rebuild.
Marie (alias Mrs Froggyt996)
This Sea Comander was another disaster, rescued from fleabay a couple of years ago as a 50s/60s bare shell. Whilst the hull was basically sound, the model needed considerable surgery. I resisted the temptation to cover it in modern fittings and have kept it original looking. Power is an electric 800 motor on 12 volts with 2 channel 27Mhz R/C. Performance is reasonable, particularly as I have lightened the original internal structure considerably. A big 7AH battery lasts for ages but for speed I use a small 2.5AH one. Owner sails at Warminster Model Boat Club, Wiltshire.
{"text":"This Sea Comander was another disaster, rescued from fleabay a couple of years ago as a 50s/60s bare shell. Whilst the hull was basically sound, the model needed considerable surgery. I resisted the temptation to cover it in modern fittings and have kept it original looking. Power is an electric 800 motor on 12 volts with 2 channel 27Mhz R/C. Performance is reasonable, particularly as I have lightened the original internal structure considerably. A big 7AH battery lasts for ages but for speed I use a small 2.5AH one. Owner sails at Warminster Model Boat Club, Wiltshire.","subject":"Aerokits Sea Commander","media":[{"id":"1228066413","name":"1228066413.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1228066413/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1228066413/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1228066414","name":"1228066414.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1228066414/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1228066414/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
This Sea Comander was another disaster, rescued from fleabay a couple of years ago as a 50s/60s bare shell. Whilst the hull was basically sound, the model needed considerable surgery. I resisted the temptation to cover it in modern fittings and have kept it original looking. Power is an electric 800 motor on 12 volts with 2 channel 27Mhz R/C. Performance is reasonable, particularly as I have lightened the original internal structure considerably. A big 7AH battery lasts for ages but for speed I use a small 2.5AH one. Owner sails at Warminster Model Boat Club, Wiltshire.
Interesting thought. I don't think there was a specific finish and most of the advertisements I have seen for the kits in period were of course in black and white. The only consistency in the various advertisements appears to show the boat with very light colour (white?) hull sides and the cabin roofs in the same colour. Deck, windscreen surround, handrails and cabin sides are in a light wood finish. The lower hull colour is dark and I always assumed red or blue. Not much help I'm afraid but it does look good. Peter
Interesting thought. I don't think there was a specific finish and most of the advertisements I have seen for the kits in period were of course in black and white. The only consistency in the various advertisements appears to show the boat with very light colour (white?) hull sides and the cabin roofs in the same colour. Deck, windscreen surround, handrails and cabin sides are in a light wood finish. The lower hull colour is dark and I always assumed red or blue. Not much help I'm afraid but it does look good. Peter
46 inch Crash Tender rescued from E-bay. Currently in the process of total restoration and have had to scratch build the entire super structure. Have fitted a Merco 61 engine with tuned pipe (the noise is awesome).
Have gone for it with the radio control- - employing a Robbe F14 plus an extra 8 channel module with decoder. So far extra controls are : each monitor (scratch built using brass pipe & sheet) left & right (using Robbe pulley set to give me 270 degrees travel), two Irvine water pumps, (real car) hooter, winch (using gearbox from Maplins) and movement for jib and search light.
{"text":"46 inch Crash Tender rescued from E-bay. Currently in the process of total restoration and have had to scratch build the entire super structure. Have fitted a Merco 61 engine with tuned pipe (the noise is awesome).\r\n\r\nHave gone for it with the radio control- - employing a Robbe F14 plus an extra 8 channel module with decoder. So far extra controls are : each monitor (scratch built using brass pipe & sheet) left & right (using Robbe pulley set to give me 270 degrees travel), two Irvine water pumps, (real car) hooter, winch (using gearbox from Maplins) and movement for jib and search light.","subject":"46 Inch Crash Tender Rescued From E-bay By Peter Harvey","media":[],"youtubeUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t528prNjC0k"}
46 Inch Crash Tender Rescued From E-bay By Peter Harvey
46 inch Crash Tender rescued from E-bay. Currently in the process of total restoration and have had to scratch build the entire super structure. Have fitted a Merco 61 engine with tuned pipe (the noise is awesome).
Have gone for it with the radio control- - employing a Robbe F14 plus an extra 8 channel module with decoder. So far extra controls are : each monitor (scratch built using brass pipe & sheet) left & right (using Robbe pulley set to give me 270 degrees travel), two Irvine water pumps, (real car) hooter, winch (using gearbox from Maplins) and movement for jib and search light.
LCT 247 built from scratch by some one ?
Bought off Ebay, it runs on 7.2volt with a johnson 565 motor. Go's like the wind.
{"text":"LCT 247 built from scratch by some one ?\r\n\r\nBought off Ebay, it runs on 7.2volt with a johnson 565 motor. Go's like the wind.","subject":"LCT 247 restored by Bob Jones","media":[{"id":"1210194236","name":"1210194236.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194236/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194236/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194237","name":"1210194237.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194237/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194237/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194238","name":"1210194238.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194238/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194238/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
Rescued from e-bay.
Decaperm, MonoPerm motor ? was wired for 6 V but very slow so have fitte a Viper Marine ESC and wired for 12 V - not sure if it would take 18 V - any advice would be appreciated.
As no pond near Camberley I boat Sunday mornings at the Stoke Park pond, Guildford. Not a large pond but great for scale and small to medium speed boating.
Second picture of a Skimmer scratch building (plans from Model Boats magazine Sep 2007) - work in progress.
{"text":"Rescued from e-bay.\r\nDecaperm, MonoPerm motor ? was wired for 6 V but very slow so have fitte a Viper Marine ESC and wired for 12 V - not sure if it would take 18 V - any advice would be appreciated.\r\n\r\nAs no pond near Camberley I boat Sunday mornings at the Stoke Park pond, Guildford. Not a large pond but great for scale and small to medium speed boating.\r\n\r\nSecond picture of a Skimmer scratch building (plans from Model Boats magazine Sep 2007) - work in progress.","subject":"Fire Boat. Skimmer","media":[{"id":"1214271694","name":"1214271694.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1214271694/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1214271694/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1214271695","name":"1214271695.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1214271695/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1214271695/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
Rescued from e-bay.
Decaperm, MonoPerm motor ? was wired for 6 V but very slow so have fitte a Viper Marine ESC and wired for 12 V - not sure if it would take 18 V - any advice would be appreciated.
As no pond near Camberley I boat Sunday mornings at the Stoke Park pond, Guildford. Not a large pond but great for scale and small to medium speed boating.
Second picture of a Skimmer scratch building (plans from Model Boats magazine Sep 2007) - work in progress.
W165 was built by Roger Forlines, he's a member of Shelton Scale Ship Modelers R/C boat club.
This boat took six months to build and is to Scale as laid down by model manufacture, the boat was weathered to depict a long voyage on the north seas.
Also, the Jim Wilder tug, this took four months to build and has been built to look like a turn of the century steam tug which worked the San Fransisco bay area.
The last picture it is dressed up for Christmas.
{"text":"W165 was built by Roger Forlines, he's a member of Shelton Scale Ship Modelers R/C boat club.\r\n\r\nThis boat took six months to build and is to Scale as laid down by model manufacture, the boat was weathered to depict a long voyage on the north seas.\r\n\r\nAlso, the Jim Wilder tug, this took four months to build and has been built to look like a turn of the century steam tug which worked the San Fransisco bay area.\r\n\r\nThe last picture it is dressed up for Christmas.","subject":"Tug Boats built by Roger Forlines","media":[{"id":"1210194424","name":"1210194424.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194424/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194424/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194425","name":"1210194425.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194425/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194425/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194426","name":"1210194426.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194426/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194426/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
W165 was built by Roger Forlines, he's a member of Shelton Scale Ship Modelers R/C boat club.
This boat took six months to build and is to Scale as laid down by model manufacture, the boat was weathered to depict a long voyage on the north seas.
Also, the Jim Wilder tug, this took four months to build and has been built to look like a turn of the century steam tug which worked the San Fransisco bay area.
I rescued my PT Boat from EBAY in August 2005. it was owned by a young boy in Birmingham whose Dad had built if for him. it is an original Aerokits kit Fast Patrol Boat. When I bought the boat it had a sound hull with a few damaged fittings, which I removed. Since then I have made new guns, extended the front cabin to carry the life raft to make it look like a late World War II Elco PT Boat and added other new fittings.
I have made 6 working exhausts in brass tubing, have fitted a new open prop shaft running an Octura race prop and a Merco 61 glow engine. it still needs torpedos, guard rails around the machine gun turrets and a few other fittings. The number 349 is from an original Pacific Theatre 80' Elco PT Boat whose name in Bee Bee, which I hope to add at a later date.
I have also painted it in an original Pacific Theatre camouflage from a PT Boat book which I bought for reference and to make it look like a standoff scale model. This boat was also photographed by the local Burton Upon Trent newspaper at the Fireboat day in September 2006. I ran this boat at the Burton Model Boat Club's Fireboat day in September 2006 briefly until I broke the exhaust manifold and had to retire it early.
{"text":"I rescued my PT Boat from EBAY in August 2005. it was owned by a young boy in Birmingham whose Dad had built if for him. it is an original Aerokits kit Fast Patrol Boat. When I bought the boat it had a sound hull with a few damaged fittings, which I removed. Since then I have made new guns, extended the front cabin to carry the life raft to make it look like a late World War II Elco PT Boat and added other new fittings.\r\n\r\nI have made 6 working exhausts in brass tubing, have fitted a new open prop shaft running an Octura race prop and a Merco 61 glow engine. it still needs torpedos, guard rails around the machine gun turrets and a few other fittings. The number 349 is from an original Pacific Theatre 80' Elco PT Boat whose name in Bee Bee, which I hope to add at a later date.\r\n\r\nI have also painted it in an original Pacific Theatre camouflage from a PT Boat book which I bought for reference and to make it look like a standoff scale model. This boat was also photographed by the local Burton Upon Trent newspaper at the Fireboat day in September 2006. I ran this boat at the Burton Model Boat Club's Fireboat day in September 2006 briefly until I broke the exhaust manifold and had to retire it early.","subject":"Aerokits PT restored by Graham Taylor","media":[{"id":"1210194167","name":"1210194167.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194167/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194167/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194168","name":"1210194168.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194168/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194168/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210194169","name":"1210194169.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194169/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210194169/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
I rescued my PT Boat from EBAY in August 2005. it was owned by a young boy in Birmingham whose Dad had built if for him. it is an original Aerokits kit Fast Patrol Boat. When I bought the boat it had a sound hull with a few damaged fittings, which I removed. Since then I have made new guns, extended the front cabin to carry the life raft to make it look like a late World War II Elco PT Boat and added other new fittings.
I have made 6 working exhausts in brass tubing, have fitted a new open prop shaft running an Octura race prop and a Merco 61 glow engine. it still needs torpedos, guard rails around the machine gun turrets and a few other fittings. The number 349 is from an original Pacific Theatre 80' Elco PT Boat whose name in Bee Bee, which I hope to add at a later date.
I have also painted it in an original Pacific Theatre camouflage from a PT Boat book which I bought for reference and to make it look like a standoff scale model. This boat was also photographed by the local Burton Upon Trent newspaper at the Fireboat day in September 2006. I ran this boat at the Burton Model Boat Club's Fireboat day in September 2006 briefly until I broke the exhaust manifold and had to retire it early.
Hi, this is my Ebay Crash Tender restoration project stripped ready for re-build.
It is an original kit but needs a lot of work as you can see (some times I think it would be asier to start again - but good fun).
I'm not sure how old it is exactly, it cost me £50 from ebay. Hopefully it will be ready for next summer.
It will be electric powered, probably by a graupner speed 600 single screw.
{"text":"Hi, this is my Ebay Crash Tender restoration project stripped ready for re-build.\r\n\r\nIt is an original kit but needs a lot of work as you can see (some times I think it would be asier to start again - but good fun).\r\n\r\nI'm not sure how old it is exactly, it cost me \u00a350 from ebay. Hopefully it will be ready for next summer.\r\n\r\nIt will be electric powered, probably by a graupner speed 600 single screw.","subject":"Fireboat being restored by Dave Kershaw","media":[{"id":"1210190686","name":"1210190686.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190686/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190686/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190687","name":"1210190687.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190687/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190687/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190688","name":"1210190688.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190688/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190688/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"},{"id":"1210190689","name":"1210190689.jpg","caption":"","url":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190689/l","thumbUrl":"https://beta.model-boats.com/media/1210190689/s","isImage":true,"ext":"jpg"}],"youtubeUrl":""}
I believe this is a 34 inch aerokit, I "rescued" it from Ebay, and will bring her back to how she should look...
Watch this space...
After lots of hassle I finally got the motor and prop.shaft aligned.
with a scratch built mastshe's beginning to "LOOK" the part.
More to follow.....
{"text":"I believe this is a 34 inch aerokit, I \"rescued\" it from Ebay, and will bring her back to how she should look...\r\n\r\nWatch this space...\r\n\r\nAfter lots of hassle I finally got the motor and prop.shaft aligned.\r\nwith a scratch built mastshe's beginning to \"LOOK\" the part.\r\nMore to follow.....","subject":"Fireboat being restored by Bob Jones","media":[],"youtubeUrl":""}