If I said I ONLY spent 200 hours on my build it would probably be untrue. Hell, I spent half that much time just running back and forth to Home Depot buying stuff I forgot on the first couple of trips (that week). If I said I made 20 trips to Home Depot it would be a conservative estimate! I probably spent 10 hours just planning before I cut my first piece of wood. Mine did take longer because all the plans were in my head and not on paper, and things were worked out when I got to that stage, but still, a couple weeks? Putting on 3 coats of epoxy resin plus 3 coats of gloss spar varnish probably took upwards of 15 hours just for that step, and even then each coat had to dry at least 24 hours before going on to the next coat. That 15 hours was spread over a 2 week period because I had to wait for the epoxy resin to cure for a full week minimum before starting the spar varnish stage.
Maybe if you we building the simplest teardrop you could, and maybe if you rushed the final finish, and maybe if you had exact plans to work from, didn't make mistakes, had EVERYTHING just waiting for you when you needed it, and maybe, maybe, maybe...oh just forget the maybe's...ain't going to happen in that short of time. And IF by some miracle it should, you would most likely not be happy with the result.
My advice:
- Don't work off a time schedule.
- Don't use it for a month then say "I wish I had it to do over again."
- Take the time to do it right.
- If it is worth doing at all, it is worth doing right!
I'm happy I took my time, because I am very happy with the result.
maiden voyage photo - 10/8/11

*When doing anything, if there exists no possibility of failure, then any feeling of success is diminished.
**The glass is neither half full nor half empty...it is simply twice as big as it needs to be.
***If at first you don't succeed, redefine success.
****When I die, I want to die like my grandfather, who died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like all the passengers in his car.