DIY sailing rig for Vapor 10 kayak

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  • čas přidán 30. 09. 2015
  • A DIY sailing rig for an Old Town Vapor 10 kayak for around $130 for parts. 100% clamping system - no holes or cuts are made into the kayak. I'm sharing this so others can use the ideas to make their own sailing rig and enjoy the ride as much as I do.

Komentáře • 80

  • @ZipZipInkspot
    @ZipZipInkspot Před 4 lety +3

    Excellent rig. Really appreciated the rudder assembly, the elegant boom fitting, and that you included mast stays. Very much liked that the setup didn't disturb the kayak itself. Studying up on rigging a canoe with a small sail for the kids. Hope to reuse some of your ideas and thanks so much for sharing. Will credit if this project progresses. Thanks again!

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks for the kind words and let me know if you got a sail rig working on your canoe.

  • @zumaer2060
    @zumaer2060 Před 6 lety

    thanks for this post! I've begun applying this model to my own kayak and so far it has been working out great.

  • @stochasmvid
    @stochasmvid Před 6 lety +2

    Awesome! I love that you put both jib and main on it. I also like you rudder control setup.

  • @fizztot
    @fizztot Před 7 lety

    Thanks for the great ideas! This is the best DIY rig I've seen!

  • @maximusmeridius1240
    @maximusmeridius1240 Před 8 lety

    I'm in the middle of trying to this to my kayak its good to see some guys who have done it well done

  • @BobMaplethorppe
    @BobMaplethorppe Před 8 lety +1

    I have the angler version ordered, and might eventually add a trolling motor. I think your clamping design for the rudder is very clever and it could very easily be modified for a small motor mount. good job!

  • @zachderry6347
    @zachderry6347 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for the great vid, I am thinking of doing something like this myself

  • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720

    A 3/8" drive universal for sockets makes a great mast-to-boom goosneck on my little boat. Mounting the leeboard(s) on one bolt allows it to swivel up for beaching or hitting an obstruction. small lines secure in place. Great build, great design. Thanks.

  • @davekolb7622
    @davekolb7622 Před 5 lety

    Nice practical design!I tjink I'm going to borrow some of your ideas for my grandsons kayak. Thanks for sharing.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 5 lety

      Glad to hear you will use these ideas for your grandsons kayak. Good luck.

  • @naomitracy5684
    @naomitracy5684 Před 2 lety

    this is the video i was looking for!! Thank you ! Excellent work. 💯👍

  • @jaytua730
    @jaytua730 Před 8 lety

    thanks, I have a sail right now but only able to go down wind, been thinking into doing a sail just like yours but have never seen it done. My kayak is a sit on top, I need to figure out a way to attach the mast. Thanks for the video.

  • @jameschang4341
    @jameschang4341 Před 3 lety

    Best Beautiful sailing rig diy job

  • @PA96704
    @PA96704 Před 3 lety

    Awesome job 🤙🏾

  • @yta6765
    @yta6765 Před 3 lety

    Very practical ideas. I would consider a couple of jam cleats for the halyards - easier to release in a hurry in case of necessity.

  • @montgomeryliteflyers
    @montgomeryliteflyers Před 6 lety

    Nice job, Im really interested in building some rendition of this DIY.

  • @andrewmartinez4331
    @andrewmartinez4331 Před 7 lety

    i love your video!!! it is the most informative diy kayak sail out there. it's so cool how you have a main sail and a jib sheet. i want to build one as soon as i get a kayak. i can't figure out exactly how you get your mast to move freely. is it pvc couplings inside of larger pvc? maybe you can do a more in depth video on how your awesome design works. I'd love to know. thanks again for your video

  • @maximusmeridius1240
    @maximusmeridius1240 Před 8 lety +1

    I like this , good video

  • @basilicauk
    @basilicauk Před 7 lety

    really good job! Thanks

  • @tlsimpao
    @tlsimpao Před 5 lety

    Brilliant! Thanks for sharing this!

  • @Rincon009
    @Rincon009 Před 2 lety

    Best DIY yet!

  • @RobbsHomemadeLife
    @RobbsHomemadeLife Před 7 lety

    nice one Dr cad, I subscribed, hope you post more.

  • @fersnickeredroby6740
    @fersnickeredroby6740 Před 3 lety

    someone is thinking of putting some type of a dagger board on a sail mounted kayak. good job

  • @hieubb1802
    @hieubb1802 Před 3 lety

    Great in simple. Tks .

  • @ZongoOZ
    @ZongoOZ Před 4 lety

    Really cool engineering.

  • @RLZerr
    @RLZerr Před 8 lety +3

    nice work!

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 8 lety +3

      Thanks. Your video was one of the videos I reviewed several times before creating my sail rig. Very inspiring. I thought the HDPE welding was especially cool. After watching your video and several others, I just had to do this. What a great way to have a personal sailboat that can easily transport on a car top and require only one person for set up and launch. All for very little money. Again, nice work on yours also.

    • @brucehalleran1149
      @brucehalleran1149 Před 7 lety

      Best, you can paddle it into areas, or home, when the wind isn't cooperating. I have the Old Town Trip 10 (same boat) and I believe that you have just saved me from figuring out how to hang a motor on it.

  • @susycalvert4074
    @susycalvert4074 Před rokem

    Very clever! I wish kayak makers would make a model that includes a built in centerboard slot. It seems like it would be a nice option to help straight line tracking when paddling, and also make it much easier to add a sail and rudder for sailing. I think it would be really nice if I could buy 2 kayaks with centerboard slots, and then join them with some crossbars and make a catamaran.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před rokem

      Agreed. I thought long and hard about tying both of my kayaks together (I have two of the same Vapor 10 kayak) as a catamaran but just haven't had the time. Good idea.

  • @maximusmeridius1240
    @maximusmeridius1240 Před 8 lety

    the best informative video I have ever seewell done

  • @MaxDIY1
    @MaxDIY1 Před 7 lety

    Great mate, ! Cheap and workks my style ;) You have very cheap kayaks in US

  • @PovoNomadeexpedicoes
    @PovoNomadeexpedicoes Před 3 lety

    Very good!!!

  • @jeremyholland4527
    @jeremyholland4527 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing. Ill try to do one myself and if it works out ill post a vid to my channel so you can see the rig!

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 3 lety

      Please let me know if you had any success with your kayak sail rig.

  • @savassagr9194
    @savassagr9194 Před 5 lety

    good job captain

  • @fernandocoppola7839
    @fernandocoppola7839 Před 7 lety

    Xcellent Dr Cad! (Suscribed) I´ll try my best to copy your model. Do you have any pdf plans? Rgds

  • @josephpineda1368
    @josephpineda1368 Před 8 lety +1

    nice use of clamping,lee boards could be a problem in shallow water launch.but i like the front clamp for the mast base .i have a 12 ft vapor check out my set up (the ultimate sailing kayak) and tell me what you think. i love to sail

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 8 lety +1

      +joseph pineda Hello Joe. Actually your video was one of the videos I saw that inspired me to make my sailing kayak(especially since it is an Old Town Vapor). I saw your video a year or two ago and loved the idea. Thanks for the inspiration and ideas. A nice video and sailing kayak you've got there.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 8 lety +2

      One additional comment. Yes, because the lee board is bolted on and doesn't pivot, I am limited in shallow water. So I keep the lee board in the boat during launch, paddle out to deep water, collapse & stow the paddle, and then mount the lee board. No problems so far but a sand bar could be an unpleasant surprise. I might re-design to allow some kind of kick-up or pivoting action in the future.

  • @mayberryastronomy6335
    @mayberryastronomy6335 Před 4 lety +2

    Working on planning this project for a kayak I am buying. Hoping to be working in a month and have it ready for memorial day at the lake. Do you still sail this rig? What kind of speeds were you getting? I am also curious about stability. I have been toying with some ideas... I'm an engineer so I love how clean and neat yours looks.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 4 lety +2

      Sorry for the late reply. I still sail it but I'm not sure of the speeds. It gets me around but not super fast. On a good day, I will guess up to 10mph. Stability is a challenge - I have to fight it a little bit when it is gusty. I have contemplated making some outriggers inspired by the Windrider Tango sailing kayak but I'm torn on just how I want to make them.

  • @ZongoOZ
    @ZongoOZ Před 4 lety

    Hi. Thanks for the great video. Could you please let me know the dimensions of the mainsail please? I have begun having a go at making a setup for my kayak. It is an Australis squid sit-on kayak. Off to a very slow start but determined to have a go. Thanks again. Dan

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 4 lety +2

      The main sail area is 16 sqft, the jib is 9 sqft for a total of 25 sq ft. The mast is 9ft so the luff edge of the main sail is about 7ft. If the sail was any larger, I think I would have severe stability problems because of the power. A larger sail will need a larger leeboard to compensate. When I started this, I found info on the internet about the ratio of sail area vs. foil area (dagger board, center board, or lee board) in the water. If you don't have enough foil in the water to compensate the sails, you will have stability and side slipping problems. Good luck.

  • @soma_trip1863
    @soma_trip1863 Před 7 lety

    Nice, but this seems to be your only video. Do you have any more clips of it sailing? I was thinking of building a duck punt, but since I already have a ten foot old town kayak might just have to go this route instead.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety

      When I get some time, I will try to get some clips of the kayak sailing. I have some clips but they are all from in my point of view while sailing instead of a wide shot from the shore or another boat.

  • @HandyKindaGuyUK
    @HandyKindaGuyUK Před 7 lety

    acrylic tends to shatter. you thought about reinforced hdpe for the rudders?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety +1

      True, acrylic tends to shatter and I have experienced this when tooling it or dropping it but it is what I had at the time I was building. HDPE would be good but it doesn't have the rigidity and the lee board takes a lot of force. I will probably replace the lee board with wood at some point and cover it with polyester resin or something like it to seal it from the water. The rudder will probably stay acrylic until I break it and then I will weigh my options - probably HDPE for this since it is smaller and likely won't flex as much as the lee board. Happy sailing.

    • @brucehalleran1149
      @brucehalleran1149 Před 7 lety

      Why not Al sheet for the lee boards or rudder? Whatever good alloy your scrap yard has in 1/8" to 1/4" would be rigid enough, easy to work, strong enough to allow a single point (pivot-able) mounting, slick, paintable, and only dangerous to swimmers you run over.

  • @tioko5
    @tioko5 Před 8 lety

    hello I was wondering how long your boom is? also do you beleive that this design is adaptable to the heron 9 old town kayak?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 8 lety

      +Jonathan Dudenhoefer Hello Jonathan. The boom is 48". I took a look at the Heron online. From what I can see, I think you could adapt my design to the Heron. The cockpit in the Heron doesn't look as large as the vapor so it might be a little tight with the mast mount assembly but it should be workable. The handles look to be the same so you should be able to set up a rudder mount but be careful transporting it - I worry about ripping out the handle if too much force is applied by an accidental bump. Good luck and happy kayaking/sailing.

  • @zumaer2060
    @zumaer2060 Před 6 lety

    Hello again, could you possibly tell me the dimensions of your jib sheet in the L*W format not sqaure footage?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 6 lety

      See my previous reply. I'm glad that people are able to use this information to develop their own sailing kayaks. People on CZcams have helped me solve problems and this is my way of paying everyone back. Enjoy sailing!

  • @deltafour1212
    @deltafour1212 Před 7 lety

    Now that you sailed her, what would you do different in your design if any?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety

      I haven't done this yet but I need to try sailing her without the boom. I think the sail shape may take a more natural Bernoulli (wing) shape without it. I'm going to upgrade my cheap-o pulleys that control the steering with some better sailing blocks because the line that controls the rudder frequently gets stuck in the cheap pulleys and good steering seems important. I also plan to take some pool noodle material and pad the area between the rudder attachment and where it attaches to the rear handle to firm that area up. Sometime the rudder assembly wiggles a little and I don't want to wear a hole in the boat but no visible damage so far. Those are the main things I would change.

  • @Manuel_Z_Kayaks
    @Manuel_Z_Kayaks Před 8 lety

    Thought of a name for your boat "PLUMBERS DELIGHT"
    I guess the next video is DIY PVC OUTRIGGERS.
    Just curious... Why no vids of it actually sailing in real wind?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 8 lety

      No videos because I have no camera man. I'll add some later if I get one. I have only had this out 3 times so far but I have sailed this in 10 - 15 mph winds and thus far it doesn't seem to need outriggers. It's only 25 sq ft of sail so it doesn't seem to overpower the boat.

  • @heleosanchez7062
    @heleosanchez7062 Před 6 lety

    Hi Doctor CAD, I'm using your template for your sailing yak to convert my "Ascend D12" yak into a sailing yak and I was hoping you could give me the dimensions of your jib sheet. L*W format. And what is the distance between the mast and the base of the forward stay?

    • @heleosanchez7062
      @heleosanchez7062 Před 6 lety

      This was assuming the jib sheet is the shape of a right triangle like the main sheet. From the pics it looks like it could be an isosceles triangle.

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 6 lety

      Sorry for the late reply. The jib is isosceles and the dimensions for each leg are 90"(luff), 77.25" (leech), and 35.5 (foot). These dimensions do no include the hems. There is a 1 inch hem on the leech to make enough room to place grommets and the rest of the hems and seam allowances are 1/2 inch. The distance from mast to the base of the forward stay is about 22 inches.

  • @dimitriosangelou4206
    @dimitriosangelou4206 Před 7 lety

    nice work!
    how heavy was the nylon ripstop fabric ? I was looking at 4 oz nylon ripstop for my 4,5m dory from ebay but i dont know if it is strong enough. There was also a lighter one that they use for parachutesbut i think it is out of qwestion.
    ps my current sail is made of tarp

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety +1

      Sadly, I cannot remember the weight of the ripstop nylon. I just picked up whatever was at the fabric/craft store and it worked well. I think it was only $5 or $6 on sale (normally $8/yd). If it helps, it seems to be about the same weight as my backpacking tent. Happy sailing.

  • @CJSHM
    @CJSHM Před 5 lety

    What material did you use for the sail?

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 4 lety

      Material for the sail on the kayak is rip-stop nylon from Jo-Ann fabrics (or any fabric store should have this). I would probably have been better served with some type of sail cloth but this works.

  • @AvidDiving
    @AvidDiving Před 7 lety

    where did you get the sails

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety +1

      I made the sails myself. I used CAD to make the general plan and I am fortunate enough to work for a company that makes automated cutters for fabric so the cutting process was easy. I also specialize in CAD for textile patterns as a career so the patterning came somewhat naturally. I picked up a few yards of rip-stop nylon from the fabric store and sewed them together. I've seen other videos where people just use Tyvek or even a shower curtain and they seem to be effective as well if you don't want to get this elaborate.

  • @josemanuelcastell5990
    @josemanuelcastell5990 Před 4 lety

    why didn´t you used a white color brida half way closed? jajaajja

  • @kangoo38vanrenault80
    @kangoo38vanrenault80 Před 5 lety

    Bonsoir, combien mesure le kayak , et la hauteur du mas

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 5 lety +1

      Bonjour. Je suis desole. Je parle tres petit francais. Le kayak coûte 350 $ US et le mât 275 cm. Les fournitures pour construire la plate-forme de voile est de 130 $ US. Bon chance.

    • @kangoo38vanrenault80
      @kangoo38vanrenault80 Před 5 lety

      @@doctorcad1557 merci beaucoup pour les informations 🖒

  • @zumaer2060
    @zumaer2060 Před 6 lety

    thanks for this post! I've begun applying this model to my own kayak and so far it has been working out great.

  • @basilicauk
    @basilicauk Před 7 lety

    really good job! Thanks

  • @andrewmartinez4331
    @andrewmartinez4331 Před 7 lety

    i love your video!!! it is the most informative diy kayak sail out there. it's so cool how you have a main sail and a jib sheet. i want to build one as soon as i get a kayak. i can't figure out exactly how you get your mast to move freely. is it pvc couplings inside of larger pvc? maybe you can do a more in depth video on how your awesome design works. I'd love to know. thanks again for your video

    • @doctorcad1557
      @doctorcad1557  Před 7 lety

      Hello Andrew. Glad you liked the video and I hope it helps you build your own. I think you are referring to how the boom moves freely on the mast. The mast is 3/4inch PVC pipe (reinforced with metal electrical conduit) and the boom is also 3/4inch PVC pipe but it is connected to the mast with a tee joint that is 3/4" on one end for the boom but 1"(or larger?) to fit loosely around the mast. This piece is easy to find at a home improvement store. Happy sailing.