Michalak Vamp
by Rick Cunningham

About halfway through building my Lewis LilJon, I decided to do something constructive with all the rain delays and try to read up on this boatbuilding business that had unexpectedly turned into an obsession. Payson’s Build the New Instant Boats found its way into our house to be followed shortly by Michalak’s Boatbuilding for Beginners (and beyond). Within a few weeks I had both books nearly memorized, and had decided the next boat would be stitch and glue. I’d used taped seams in a few places on the LilJon and figured I’d be ready.


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Just what now to build? I wanted a rowing boat light enough to load in and out of the truck alone. One that looks nice. And not too expensive [insert appropriate Monty Python line here]. At a listed weight of 60 lbs, Michalak’s Robote (plans are in the book) would fit the bill, but I was concerned about beaching the hull’s 9” deep V on the gravel landings at the lakes I usually visit. QT Skiff was another possibility. Like Robote, the plans were in the book, I could probably keep the weight down a bit by building it stitch and glue, and the flat bottom would be easier to beach. Both these boats are over 13’ long though, and that’s a bit much for the bed of a Ranger pickup. In the meantime I ordered plans for Vamp and Rogue, and spent several weeks with both plans layed out side by side on the floor (all the while trying to get the LilJon finished).


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Vamp won out in the end. It’s a shorter version of Robote with a shallower V, and required fewer panels and less glassing than the multi-chined Rogue. Wayne Farris and I live about 2 miles apart, and decided to go in together on an order of 6mm Meranti marine ply. The plywood stood in our dining room for several weeks before I finally got up the nerve to carve up the expensive stuff, but the saber saw did its job and I was off.


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When the time came to screw the forms to the sides, I was suddenly confused—Michalaks’ plans clearly state whether the front or rear edges of the forms are to meet the lines on the panels, but which side was the front? The side with the 1X2 sticks or the other one? After installing all the forms backwards the first time and seeing that the lines of the hull weren’t all that fair, I went back through the book again, looked at the plans again, and looked at as many Michalak construction photos online as I could find. The front form ended up staying backwards as that’s the only way I could get the sides and bottom panels to meet at the bow. I must have measured something wrong, but it was too late to fix it now… The trick of lining up a 1X4 along the centerlines of the frames, stem, and transom works. I was worried that with no flat bottom to keep everything shored up square as I worked on the boat (all that rocker and V bottom had me chasing the hull around on the sawhorses a few times!), the hull would end up twisted. Nope, sighting down the forms even after the taping was finished and the 1X4 removed it was straight as an arrow—and giving my building skills, that’s saying something.


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Getting the 6mm panels to bend in two directions at once turned out to be more of a challenge than I’d counted on, but they finally cooperated. Somehow I ended up with gaps of nearly an inch in the area of the center form when all the sweating and tie-wrapping was done. I hated it, but I wasn’t about to order more $50/sheet plywood. This would be a good test of fillets and taped seams. Somewhere in the process I got tired of mixing up epoxy and wood flour for the fillets and grabbed a handy can of Bondo. Worked great, cured a lot faster, and didn’t squish around when laying down the tape. Given that, I could put up with the smell.


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Rotator cuff surgery delayed the finishing of the boat, but after a couple coats of Severe Weather latex on the hull and oil enamel on the gunwales and thwarts, she was finally ready to get wet. Up until the launching of this boat, most of the rowing I’d done was in the LilJon I’d built earlier in the year. I wasn’t sure what to expect of a light V bottom skiff that was actually designed for rowing.


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Holy Smokes! Even without the cleats to dig your heels into, this little boat would scoot with very little effort. With the shallow V bottom and the plank seat you have to keep your legs straight out in front of you to keep them out of the way of the oars, but once that adjustment is made the only hard thing is figuring out how far ahead of time you have to stop rowing to be able to stop! A very responsive boat, even for a novice rower.


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By the time of the Lake Jordan Messabout the cleats were in place, and I (and everyone else there) was surprised at just how fast Vamp will go when you can put your back into it. Several there, including Wayne and our host Mikee gave it a whirl, and everybody had good things to say about her. I made several mistakes in building this boat (which aren’t hard to spot if you look close), but the fact that it turned out to still look good and perform as well as it does is a testament to Michalak’s plans.


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My original plan was to fillet all three seats in place instead of using removable planks as Michalak recommended. This will work if you use the boat alone and leave the center seat in permanently, but with 2 people aboard the center seat needs to be removed to allow enough legroom. So if your plans are to use your boat with 2 aboard most of the time and the extra length isn’t an issue, Robote would be a better choice.

If you’ve been thinking about a good lightweight rowing boat, consider Vamp. Mine’s a keeper.