A  slow-speed camp cruiser 
                  
                It would seem as though the “Golden Age” of yachting has  passed us by.  Instead, perhaps, there is  a new movement afoot --  a movement of  backyard and garage boat builders, building at home using plywood (often  construction grade) and epoxy, building boats that were never designed nor  intended to last more than a couple of decades, and having an absolute blast  doing so!  This movement has spawned  get-togethers that are called “Messabouts,” and they are happening all over the  mid-west and western US!  The  participants are called “Messers,” (and sometimes their boats are called  “messes.”) The CenTex-16 grew from this fierce and irrepressible independence  from economic recession mixed with the irrepressible desire to cruise, and  without the need to mortgage your fuel.   It was heavily influenced by my personal experiences cruising on a  sailboat, and the undeniable reality that getting there is sometimes half the  fun and should be savored in a microwave, 80mph world. 
                  
                
                  -  An  affordable, easily built and easily managed outboard powered boat that will  take a couple of people off to beaches or secluded river bends for a weekend or  a few days, possibly beaching at night, but without the inconvenience of having  to carry and pitch a tent every night.   Everything is – or can be – self-contained. 
 
                     
                   
                  -  The boat  needed to be trailerable, which means it needed to be launch-able from a  trailer.  Those of us that have launched  boats off of trailers realize that the easier it is to set up and launch a  boat, the more often it will get used.   The CenTex-16 can be underway in a matter of minutes.
 
                     
                   
                  -  It needed  easy, home-built construction; yet with no compromise to strength or safety.  Plywood is the obvious choice; whether  construction grade (least expensive, but lowest longevity) or marine grade  (best value, longest life.)  Epoxy will  extend the life of the boat indefinitely with little maintenance, and is easily  applied.  While I have specified the use  of a strongback in the construction of the hull because I think this is a  bullet-proof method to make sure everything is lined up, symmetrical, and fair,  it is not required.  This boat can easily  be assembled into a robust model using stitch-and-glue or stitch-and-tape  methods.
 
                     
                   
                  -  It needed  to be easily maintained.  Wood boats and  fiberglass yachts all have their spring and fall required rituals.  This boat is neither; nor does the builder or  owner need to participate in paying and caulking seams, painting, winterizing,  etc.  Hose her off after use, sponge out  the interior corners, do the normal maintenance any outboard requires, and we  are good to go.  Clean her up with soap  and water, maybe wax her once a year.
 
                     
                   
                  -  Despite  its low cost and ease of building, the boat needed to perform well (and fast  does not necessarily mean well!)  I tried  to envision all sorts of situations she would face; bobbing at anchor  overnight, running up on a sand beach, moored to the guest dock in a marina, or  puttering through the Inter-Coastal Waterway.   She needed to have a gentle ride, be seakindly in a blow, and  weathertight. I didn’t want her bow to  slap a lot, I wanted places to stuff gooky anchors and sandy shoes while keeping  bedrolls clean, and I wanted her to resist being pooped by following waves or  blown about in crosswinds.  Especially,  though, she needed to be comfortable and fun to use, or she would sit on her  trailer while other boats were used.
 
                 
                  
                The CenTex-16 was designed to address each of these  goals.  She was given the profile of the  beloved Sharpie, with plenty of rocker, to help her track.  Sharpies are well-known to be easily driven,  and but a few horsepower will bring her to hull speed.  In a departure from the standard flat-bottomed  Sharpie, she was given a hull with a slight vee, to soften her ride both under  power and at anchor, despite requiring slightly more complicated building  techniques.  Finally, she was given a  raised deck, in order to maximize accommodations. 
                  
                 The Centex-16 requires 6 sheets of ¼” plywood, 9 sheets of  ½” plywood, and can be completed using home center timber, some fiberglass and  some fasteners, all of which are discussed in the building manual.  
                CenTex-16 Particulars
                  
                    
                      | LOA | 
                      - | 
                      16’0” | 
                     
                    
                      | LWL | 
                      - | 
                      13’9” | 
                     
                    
                      | Beam | 
                      - | 
                      6’0” | 
                     
                    
                      | Draft | 
                      - | 
                      9-1/2” | 
                     
                    
                      | Displacement | 
                      - | 
                      1275 Lbs          | 
                     
                    
                      | Horsepower | 
                      - | 
                      up to 20 | 
                     
                   
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