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Plastic Milestones
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 7:13 pm
by cadster
Hollowform did the first rotomolded kayaks.
Blue Hole did the first Royalex canoes.
The Skeeter was the first rotomolded canoe, by Savage?
Who did the first PE canoe from a sheet? I'm hoping it was Old Town and not Coleman.
First Royalex canoe
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 7:49 pm
by dixie_boater
I heard the Warsaw Rocket was the first Royalex canoe. Bob Lantz bought hulls from Warsaw to make his first canoes, before he made the OCA.
In late 80's Bluehole made a experimental PE canoe. Bob brought it to the Ocoee one summer for folks to try out. I heard it was fairly heavy - no surprise there.
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 7:51 pm
by kaz
I think the first PE canoe company was Keewaydin. My first canoe purchased in 1975 was a Keewaydin KT-17. 17' long? Now that was long boatin'!
JKaz
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 8:28 pm
by philcanoe
John,
that's funny...
Frankie remarked (under his breath) one day, real slow and where no one could hear... "Hey man, all that is - is a Keowee". We were pulled over on the Ocoee taking a break, watching as someone was surfing a "Skeeter". We laughed and never did I hear him say that again, although you an bet it was mentioned to him again.
He was joking of course.
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 9:21 pm
by cadster
Glenn MacGrady posted in detail about early Royalex last year see:
http://cboats.net/cforum/viewtopic.php? ... ght=#32111
http://cboats.net/cforum/viewtopic.php? ... ght=#33838
So Old Town may have had the first Royalex canoe, but Coleman beat them to PE.
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 9:28 pm
by cadster
Here's an Outside article on WW design history.
Outside Online April 2002
Paddlers Who Set the High-Water Mark
By Cristina Opdahl
THIRTY YEARS AGO, if you wanted to run a river, you steered a 60-pound barge and prayed. But today, a serious boater owns a quiver of vessels, from a Royalex canoe to a rodeo kayak. Here's a salute to the designers who built the rides.
In the late sixties, Los Angeles fireman and amateur paddler Tom Johnson spent more time patching fiberglass than running rivers. Then Johnson and his buddy Don Carmichael, an employee at the plastic-trash-can manufacturer Hollowform, convinced execs to start producing plastic kayaks. Boating was soon transformed: In 1973, Johnson designed the canary-yellow, 13-foot-long River Chaser, and the age of California-style steepcreeking was born.
Tired of watching rocky Appalachian Rivers play Humpty-Dumpty with their canoes, structural engineers Bob Lantz and Bill Griswold journeyed to Warsaw, Indiana, to visit a company that built crude canoe hulls out of a new firm and foamy plastic called Royalex. By 1974, Lantz had founded the Blue Hole Canoe Company, the first business to mass-market durable Royalex rides.
Bill Masters, owner of the fledgling company Perception, became the king of kayak manufacturing in 1978 by designing a rotational molder and oven to mass-produce plastic kayaks. Then he offered a precedent-setting one-year warranty on his boats. By 1998 he was selling 50,000 per year.
In 1979, Nolan Whitesell set out to prove he could do anything a kayaker could do—in an open canoe. He developed an effective whitewater roll, invented inflatable float bags, and became the first canoeist to tackle dozens of Class V-plus rapids. Whitesell's canoe design, the Piranha, helped: He reshaped and widened a typical hull by three inches for stability in rough water.
Kayaking used to be a 2-D sport—paddlers floated on a river and reacted to its surface currents. But in 1981, Jesse Whittemore and former Olympian Jon Lugbill started slicing bows and sterns underwater in moves dubbed squirts, cartwheels, and blasts. Paddler Jim Snyder got wind of their antics and began designing skinnier boats, which set off the squirt-boat revolution.
With their creation of the Crossfire kayak in 1991, former Olympian Chris Spelius and designer Steve Scarborough touched off the boat-design wars. The Crossfire's curved ends and shorter length made it turn on a dime. Dagger, Scarborough's company, carved out a secure place in an industry that had been dominated by Perception for a decade.
And the innovations go on: Corran Addison arrived at California's 1994 Pacifica Surf Contest with his Fury, a strange new breed of rodeo kayak that had a squarish hull built to plane over the water rather than sit in it. Today, almost every new kayak features his boxier profile, making Addison's signature moves—air-blunts and air-screws—mandatory components of every pro rodeo boater's bag of tricks.
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 10:34 pm
by ezwater
Kaz, I can remember boat-inspecting just CLOUDS of 16' Keewaydin canoes for the Southeaster downriver event, back in the latter 70s. Later they just smack disappeared.... didn't last, I guess, because the boats that were winning the cruising class subsequently were not faster. Friend of mine won two years in a row in an OT Penobscot 16.