HERE WE HAVE Sure Mike II, ideally
                calculated to take the largest stock
                outboard motor, the Mercury Mark
                55. This boat is 21 feet long with an
                8-foot  beam.  She  probably  comes
                closer to the size of small cruiser desired by most men than any other
                boat of this type we have run in the
                Boatbuilding Annuals.
                
                She is carefully sized, having been
                swimming around on my sketch pad
                for a couple of years. As to her running qualities, little more can be
                asked from a boat this size.
                
                I've  approached  the  problem  of
                construction from all angles and have
                decided on a seam-batten job, with
                planking specified in the usual manner. If it is desired, the topside strakes
                may be cut from 3/8-inch 5-ply Super
                Harbord marine grade plywood. I
                should plank her bottom in regular
                seam-batten fashion, using mahogany
                or white cedar planking of the thickness specified.
                
                I decided on this type of construction on the basis of (1) my own experience handling large plywood panels in a home shop, and  (2)  after
                  much talk with men who have tried
                  to plank a hull this size in "one
                  hunk." The condensed gist of all
                  thought runs like this:
                
                  The average man isn't equipped to
                  loft a generated surface hull this size.
                  He hasn't the tools or know-how to
                  get a fair job. A hull of smaller pieces
                  —that is, straked planking—will build
                  easier in this size boat for the average
                  amateur. It will take longer, but the
                  result will be stronger, fairer and
                  somewhat heavier. This latter feature
                  is an advantage in water that dances
                  a bit.
                
                  Of course, any boatbuilder who is
                  mechanic enough can build this boat,
                  planking her of plywood throughout.
                  It is well here to mention to the novice that when a large panel of plywood, such as a topside, is both swept
                  and twisted, the cross sections that
                  result are not straight-lined sections.
                They have curve, arc, belly to them.
                  Hence the framing of an accurate
                  frame for a boat this size becomes a
                  job for & skilled loftsman.
                
                  The straight-framed job or a boat
                  with a majority of straight frames,
                  can be easily planked seam-batten
                  style in strakes. Be warned that no
                  design  with  a  preponderance  of
                  straight frames can be planked with
                  plywood. What you'll get is a series
                  of pillows between frames.
                
                  Sure Mike II can be inboard powered.  The  Gray  Model  620 would
                  make an ideal installation. The Universal 60 hp Unimite would be another good choice of engine. A Chris
                  Craft B, 60 hp, 133 cubic-inch motor
                  would also turn in an extremely good
                  performance. Red Wing also has a
                  60 hp 133 cubic-inch model that has
                  well-engineered features.
               
              
                
                  The insert elevation section shows
                  enough of the inboard motor version
                  to enable you to install the job. The skeg and rudder on the lines drawing
                  give you your dimensions for this option. The Gray 620 will want a 12-inch
                  diameter by 10-inch pitch three-blade
                  wheel. The 133 cubic-inch engines,
                  commonly built around the Hercules
                  block, will swing an 11-inch diameter
                  by 9-inch pitch three-blade wheel.
                  The Universal Unimite will want a
                  13-inch  diameter  by  8-inch pitch
                  three-blade  wheel.  Differences  in
                  torque characteristics and piston displacement are the reasons.
                
                  Speeds of around 20-22 miles an
                  hour can be reached if your boat is
                  in dry condition with a good uncluttered bottom. Under the same conditions about the same speed can be
                  had with the Mercury Mark 55—perhaps a shade better as the weight/hp
                  ratio favors this big kicker.
                
                  Though Sure Mike II is 21 feet
                  overall, the added length is but a bit
                  more than previous designs published
                  in the Boatbuilding Annual. She is
                  just three feet longer than Simplex,
                  published in the 1954 Annual, and but
                  four feet longer than Sun Dance,
                  which appeared in our 1953 Annual.
                  Both these latter boats were out
                  boarders, and had sufficient accommodation to allow them to be classified as "cruisers" under the modern
                  definition  of  the  term.  The  slight
                  added length and beam of Sure Mike
                  II, however, makes her much larger
                  than the boats her forerunners' were.
                  This is because lengths vary per the
                  square; bulk varies per the cube.
                
                  Hence, Sure Mike II, while no leviathan, is very much more of a ship
                  than the outboard cruisers of the
                  finger-bowl-washroom and candle-
                  for-stove variety.
                
                  Weight and length do much the
                  same thing for a boat that weight and
                  wheel base do for a car. Where comfort and adequacy are musts there is
                  no substitute for either.
                
                  I believe that by extending your
                  purse and muscle a little to get this
                  boat instead of something less roomy,
                  you'll cure at the start the usual disease that hits home builders—"biggeritis."
                
                  Old-timers in the boating game can
                  tell you that you will become infected
                  with  "biggeritis"  during  the  first
                  month you're afloat in your first boat.
                  She'll loom like a circus tent as you
                  first begin to plank her, this first boat
                  of yours, and she'll shrink to a pumpkin seed as you begin to use her.
                  Why this is true is beyond me—I've
                  been a midwife to boating appetites
                  for only  40 years and have never
                  learned the cause. I only know that
                  it is true.
                
                  But I doubt that in settling on Sure
                  Mike II you'll suffer much from this
                  malady.
                
                  The information published here is
                  sufficient to enable anybody to build
                  her.  Her lines must be  laid  down
                  full-sized  on  a  smooth  floor.  And
                  an ideal floor can be made from three
                  panels of 1/4 inch by 4 foot by 8 foot
                  common grade plywood.
                
                  Old-timers  at  the  boatbuilding
                  trade do not need to be told that this
                  full-sized lay-down and fairing up is
                  a must. Some beginning boatbuilders,
                  however, think a boat should be built
                  like a piece of machinery or a chair,
                  from a multitude of small drawings of
                  detailed parts. A boat cannot be built
                  this way. She must be watertight, so
                  you lay her down to get the hull
                  shape, the keel shape and the shape
                  of the knees and their bevels; also at
                  the same time fairing up obvious errors in scaling the original small (3/4 
                  inch to the foot) drawings.
                
                  This gives you the shape of the hull
                  to the outside of the skin. This outside
                  shape is the important thing.
                
                  All pieces inside the vessel are then
                  fitted to the frames and bulkheads,
                  using dimensions from centerline out
                  as given for the accommodation plan,
                  and heights from the waterline for inboard fixture and joinery heights. All
                  boats are built this way if a fair and
                  easy building job is to be had.
                The frames are to be diminished by
                  the thickness of the planking, and are
                  to have extensions which will meet
                  your building floor.
                
                  These are erected upside down over
                  the centerline and station line grid
                  marked out on your building floor.
                  The frames in this condition must
                  be created plumb, and horned square
                  with good bracing.
                
                  I should treat the transom cheeks
                  as a frame in itself, making due allowance for the fact that the projected
                  view on the body plan of the lines is
                  not the true shape of the frame: it
                  must be "expanded." That means to
                  take your half breadths for this frame
                  along the rake of the transom face.
                
                  This means that the transom cheeks
                  form a separate frame, raked. The 3/4-inch  7-ply  transom  can  then  be
                  scribed for shape, sawn and fastened
                  in place, using a good grade of casein
                  or semiwaterproof gunk.
                
                  The transom on Sure Mike II is
                  especially framed to take the largest
                  of  outboard  motors.  A  16-1/2-inch
                  transom height will work for a Mercury Mark 55; it would be well to
                  procure your motor beforehand, or
                  measure the one you will use. It is so
                  easy to dope out the transom opening
                  and framing you want as you are at
                  this stage, rather than doing it the
                  hard way (by "unmanufacturing")
                  later.
                
                  Let me insert a word here about
                  the transom hood Idea. It seems to be
                  wanted by many. It does dampen
                  noise, but that is all. All enclosures
                  around outboards I have ever had
                  anything to do with always failed to
                  keep the motor running cool, despite
                  water circulation, and the motor always ran rich because there was no
                  way to get stale smoke away from the
                  carburetor. Cover the topside and the
                  forward face, but don't try to fully
                  enclose the motor—it is against all
                  principles of air circulation. Air, to a
                  degree, always follows a broad transom. And don't, for heaven's sake, put
                  the motor on a bracket outboard.
                  She'll load up in a following sea, also
                  the strain on the transom is no good.
                
                  When the frames are up, plan out
                  the spiling of the planking, and run
                  in the battens, seeing that they land
                  well in the gains through the frames,
                  and at stem and transom cheek. Battens are best streamed in after the
                  frames are erected, cutting the gains
                  at that time. Fairer planking lines always result.
                
                  When the battens are installed. I'd
                  commence planking the topside. Start
                  at the chine, work toward the sheer.
                  Three strakes of plywood are called
                  for in this topside planking. The 3/8
                  inch thickness will be quite light, not
                  too expensive. The 1/2-inch 5-ply stuff will be best, but it costs more than the 3/8 inch. I'd choose 1/2 inch if Sure Mike were my boat.
                
                  The drawings show the fastening
                  size and frequency for this portion.
                
                  Next apply the garboard plank, and
                  work out toward the chine. Use strong
                  1/2-inch planking here, so that when
                  sanded you'll finish 1/2 inch. This is
                  none too thick in a boat this size. The
                  thickness has proved serviceable) but
                  you can't go ramming logs with it.
                  Plain,  good  boatbuilding  wood  is
                  chosen for the bottom, because it will
                  swell, get tight, and can be easily repaired. It has been my experience that
                  3/8-inch plywood has been about the
                  top limit of thickness amateurs can
                  bend without a full crew, much experience and a goodly number of expensive clamps. This thickness is not
                  enough for the bottom of a boat this
                  size. Hence the solid planking.
                
                  Soon your hull will have taken
                  shape and you are ready to sand and
                  paint her. A good rugged disc sander
                  in the hands of a skilled man who
                  won't make gouges is the best tool;
                  a reciprocating sander which takes
                  longer and wears out more sandpaper
                  is the treatment for the outboard face
                  of the skin. Several coats of grain-filling priming paint, like Firzite, will
                  be needed, and the priming coat of
                  paint is then installed.
                
                  The cabin coaming, the deck line
                  and the framing of the cockpit sole
                  are just plain straightforward carpentry and there is no need to burn
                  up paper or midnight oil on that
                  subject here.
                
                  Work from the waterline for your
                  vertical heights. Work from the centerline out for your berth faces.
                
                  Individual desires always creep into
                  one's execution of the interior of any
                  cruising boat. The sky is the limit as
                  far as trickiness is concerned, but
                  don't forget that this boat, like all
                  other careful designs, is designed to a
                  weight. Performance is a matter of
                  horsepower per pound, and behavior
                  is  a  matter  of loading  the  shape  to
                  the correct angle of attack. If you
                  change weights, try to put in a cast iron stove, install the old family refrigerator and build a dog house for
                  Rover, she then becomes your design
                  and headache—not mine.
                
                  One 25 hp Johnson or Evinrude
                  would give a good 14-15 miles in this
                  boat. Two 15 hp motors would provide
                  a safety factor) furnish 30 hp for about
                  16 mph.
                
                  Do not eliminate the skeg shown if
                  you build her for an outboard. This
                  item is there for a purpose: to make
                  the boat sweet in a following sea and
                  to take the yaw out of her when you
                  have to check down to meet wild
                  weather. Skegless outboards work on picnic days only.