ColinRowntree
Curious about Wooden Canoes
This is an interesting topic that I accidentally stumbled into when posting a thread about my 1936 Old Town on the Fans of the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association Facebook group and someone noticed I had bunged over the outside of the White Ash gunwale fasteners and said original bungs were not used by Old Town.
In the 30 years I have worked in New England wooden boat yards, almost all of the boats I worked on had bungs over all fasteners on brightwork, but that's for everything from Beetle Cats, to Wianno Seniors all the way up through Alden Schooners - this is my first Old Town Canoe restoration so I'm all ears for any onfo on pre-WWII canoes in general, and Old Town specifically (many thanks to Benson Gray for getting me the genealogy on this boat).
This now begs the question of why Old Town (and other canoe makers, pre 1940) chose not to use bungs when it was standard practice for all other wooden boats of the period.
Anyone have any more info on this arcane little topic? My interest is mow peaked!
Just for fun I asked CHATGPT to take a crack at it (look at me being all modern and trendy! LOL) and it was pretty non-committal...
Query:
Do pre-WWII old town canoes have bungs over the screws in the gunwales?
ChatGPT:
Old Town Canoe Company, founded in 1898, has a long history of producing canoes, and their designs and construction techniques have evolved over time.
Pre-World War II Old Town canoes might have had bungs over the screws in the gunwales, but it's not a universal feature across all models. The presence of bungs would depend on the specific model and the manufacturing techniques used during that era.
Some older canoes might have utilized bungs to cover screws for aesthetic reasons or to provide some protection against water ingress into the screw holes. However, not all models would have had this feature, and it's possible that different models or production runs varied in terms of their construction details.
Anyone want to take a crack at this one?
Here's where I'm at now with this old girl. All the gray paint stripped off (EEEK! Why do people paint over varnish again?) and a bit of carpentry in process before the eternal sanding begins.
You can see the bungs here prior to them being nipped off flush with a chisel prior to fairing them down and sanding.
In the 30 years I have worked in New England wooden boat yards, almost all of the boats I worked on had bungs over all fasteners on brightwork, but that's for everything from Beetle Cats, to Wianno Seniors all the way up through Alden Schooners - this is my first Old Town Canoe restoration so I'm all ears for any onfo on pre-WWII canoes in general, and Old Town specifically (many thanks to Benson Gray for getting me the genealogy on this boat).
This now begs the question of why Old Town (and other canoe makers, pre 1940) chose not to use bungs when it was standard practice for all other wooden boats of the period.
Anyone have any more info on this arcane little topic? My interest is mow peaked!
Just for fun I asked CHATGPT to take a crack at it (look at me being all modern and trendy! LOL) and it was pretty non-committal...
Query:
Do pre-WWII old town canoes have bungs over the screws in the gunwales?
ChatGPT:
Old Town Canoe Company, founded in 1898, has a long history of producing canoes, and their designs and construction techniques have evolved over time.
Pre-World War II Old Town canoes might have had bungs over the screws in the gunwales, but it's not a universal feature across all models. The presence of bungs would depend on the specific model and the manufacturing techniques used during that era.
Some older canoes might have utilized bungs to cover screws for aesthetic reasons or to provide some protection against water ingress into the screw holes. However, not all models would have had this feature, and it's possible that different models or production runs varied in terms of their construction details.
Anyone want to take a crack at this one?
Here's where I'm at now with this old girl. All the gray paint stripped off (EEEK! Why do people paint over varnish again?) and a bit of carpentry in process before the eternal sanding begins.
You can see the bungs here prior to them being nipped off flush with a chisel prior to fairing them down and sanding.