Showing posts with label SUP Rigging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SUP Rigging. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2013

Paddle Holster and Accessory Bungee All on the Cooler

I saw different versions of this idea on Alex Aguera's website and on other SUP Fishing blogs. I figured I needed one too. First thing I did was split a 2" PVC pipe - a little bit more than 50-50 (more like 55-45, you will obviously keep the bigger piece) - using Charlie Bisgard's table saw (I don't have one because honestly that tool scares me - kickback nightmares). Next I trimmed it to length - about 18" end to end. Then I cut an angle on the ends - the front is one inch shorter on each end than the back end of the pipe (side that goes toward the cooler). The Dremel came out of hibernation - I used it with a sanding barrel to round out any and all edges on the cut PVC - my luck I would step back and gouge the crap out of my legs, bleed all over and chum up Moby Dick - I like catching, but that would be messy now wouldn't it??? I wanted the mounting screws to go all the way through the cooler wall and into backings made out of old cutting board (similar to how I rigged the kayak anchor trolley a while back) - I ended up using 2" #14 stainless sheetmetal screws. I drilled out holes on the front and back edges of the pipe so I could tighten the screws straight on. When the half pipe was on, I added the bungee fittings (I DID NOT DRILL ALL THE WAY THROUGH THE INNER COOLER WALL _ JUST THE OUTSIDE). Now when I have to manage the rod and reel, I can drop the paddle into this cradle, set a bungee and enjoy the sleigh ride. In the pictures, you can see the bungee run through the holes in the front of the pipe that I used for lining up the screwdriver - this is so I can keep a measuring trough on the cooler as well as the paddle - one less thing to clutter the deck. Two other notes - if you look really close, you'll see the holder is canted to the left - I did that on purpose to encourage water drain off. And last but not least - this cooler was $39.99, not a $250+ Yeti. Choose wisely what you will drill into... I plan on testing this modification out this weekend - ice in the cooler, paddling around with La and the kids and landing a few fish - it ain't surfing, but it is pretty close!

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Hooked SUP All Dressed Up

I took a few minutes this morning to screw in the Scotty mounts and put on the bungee grid on the fore and aft deck of the new board. I used 550 cord for the stand off loops around the leash plugs and some pretty thick gauge bungee from REI for the cross members. For the Scotty mounts, I used #12 Stainless Sheet Metal screws with panheads at 1 1/4" long. 1" will work also (2 of the screws are 1" because the Home Depot near my house can't keep their fastner section squared away - I'll try to change those out when a HD head comes out of a butt orifice). Be forewarned that 1 1/2" screws are too long - when you get the screws to set in better, the foam deck pad will compress and the original clearance gets reduced. Lower the clutch on your drill when you try to set theses mounts onto the deck - slow and steady and you'll be fine. With the mounts, the bungee grids and a SurfCo flexible fin on, this board weighed in at 39.5 pounds (there might have been some water clinging around, but that's just bonus points after the evaporation).