Possibly the last Westsail/Fairweather Mariner 39

  • June 30, 2014 7:22 PM
    Message # 3035566
    Deleted user


    I have an opportunity to acquire a Fairweather Mariner 39. It may be the last FWM to come out of a mold.

    The boat is a bare hull and deck. It has been in that condition for well on 20 years -- tucked away in someone's back yard.

    After inspecting it, I have qualms because it lacks stringers inside the hull. The descriptions I've seen describe the hull as having both horizontal and vertical stringers. I could add stringers, but getting a good longitudinal bond to 20-year-old resin might be next to impossible.

    If someone doesn't rescue her, she'll be chopped up in place. She otherwise looks pristine, but I can't devote a year or two of effort to completing her if her stringerless hull is going to oil-can and twist itself apart in a seaway. Has anyone built a FWM as a kit? Did you have to add stringers?

    Does anyone know the story of stringers in the FWM hull? I can't imagine that they are molded in - and concealed so well that I can't see them through bare fiberglass and resin.


    Thanks!
    Last modified: June 30, 2014 7:37 PM | Deleted user
  • July 01, 2014 11:35 AM
    Reply # 3035925 on 3035566
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Patrick: I've emails Bud a link to your posting.

    Finishing from a bare hull in 1-2 year would be full time by an experienced boat builder at best - IMHO

    jay

  • July 05, 2014 8:52 AM
    Reply # 3038300 on 3035566

    Patrick,

    Contact me by email at  bud@westsail.com, or by phone 714-549-9331, and I will try to help you out.  Unfortunately, there is not too much construction information available on the W39, since only a few were built by Westsail in the months before the 1977 bankruptcy, and I do not believe that a construction manual was created. 

    Ed Parker, from P&M Worldwide did buy the W39 molds from the subsequent sale of the Westsail molds in 1980, and laminated a few boats as kits.  He shipped the molds over to Taiwan to have a few built there where he supervised the construction.

    Years later a number of them were imported into the US, called the Fairweather Mariner 39.  These were built by the yard there for another US importing group.

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