By my count, there has been 9 hull shells pulled out of the Gilmor mould with 2 still yet to be completed in to boats). On the weekend, with the help of my brother, I started making number 10.

First up was mold prep. The mould is a little worse for wear these days, than she was when she was new, and the last person to use her, cough doink, didn’t to the best job of leaving it how he found it. After a few hours of polishing and waxing, it started to look somewhat like its former glory days.

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Then the preparation started.

I have come to the conclusion that boat building is a lot like making stir-fry. Most of the time will be spent in preparation for the construction. All of Friday was spent cutting cloth, foam and pre-bending foam to shape with a heat gun.

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With all the foam prepared, and the cloth cut it was time for beers. Then, at about 9pm (after the kids were in bed), we set the 2 hour timer and went for it, as determined by the resin pot life and the need to have the boat under vacuum before the resin started go go off. We set a “point of no return” at 1:30 where we would assess where we were and decide to proceed with the second, inner skin as well.

In the end, we managed to get the whole thing done and in the bag in 2hours 10 mins, so we were pretty happy with that, then we set the pump on it, oh and this is no pussy small pump let me tell you …

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We recorded the whole thing on video, so here is how to build a shell in 8 mins …

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So with all this talk of Monsters and Rocket Surgeons, one could think that there is a lot going on. And there is.

But there are more builds coming. Next week I am heading north, to invade my brother’s workshop and start working on my next Moth (4th one I will have built, 6th moth in total). So here is my radical new design ….

Well, no actually It’s exactly the same as my current boat. My new hull is designed to be an evolution of my current boat, which is now going really well, and is bloody fast. Not Mach 2 fast, but is definitely capable of keeping up with any Bladerider or Prowler if the skipper has a clue (which I don’t obviously).

So why a new boat? Well being a development class there are developments that I want to try to keep moving forwards, and I have learnt a ton in the last 2 years about building things out of carbon, which I want to embody in my new hull.

At this stage, I am currently planning to move the wings, rig and foils to my new hull and sell off the hull with my first generation square foils very cheaply (around the $2K) mark after a tidy up. If someone wants the wings, better centreboard and Ilett rudder, then they could be included to, but the price will go up accordingly. At any rate, the boat won’t be sold until the new one is on the water, and I make it look pretty again, as it has been a tough season on the old girl.