Two plywood canoes designs – How to choose a plan.

There are two plywood canoes in my range catering for quite different parts of the market – a quality first class canoe and also a very cheap and easy to build canoe that still works well.

Eureka Classic canoe on left. Quick Canoe on right. There is also a motor canoe version of the Quick Canoe.

Two canoes. Simple and Classic. How to choose. storerboatplans.com

Also there is the Electric Canoe built the same way as the Quick Canoe here.

Advantages and Disadvantages of the Classic Eureka Canoe

One is the best plywood canoe I could come up with – the Eureka Canoe. It is probably best built of premium materials such as gaboon plywood to further reduce the weight to around 45lbs. Though lighter is possible.

Eureka plywood canoe with two largish crew - storer boat plans

Building time is around the 70 hours mark, but most part time builders seem to take about three months of part time work.  The premium materials recommended bring the cost out to $400 to $800, but you could build cheaper.

This is a useful review of the Eureka by experienced canoeists – the built it down to 35lbs. This is their boat below.

The Eureka plywood canoe - light and beautiful
Eureka Canoe – Classic shape from a plywood canoe.

Advantages and disadvantages of the easy to build Quick Canoe

The other is the simplest and cheapest plywood canoe that would still look good and work well – the Quick Canoe.

I will be developing the Quick Canoe into a series of boats over time. I have also made the plans of this boat really cheap to fit in with the low budget nature of the project.  (also introducing  the Quick Canoe Electric – 34lb thrust trolling motor gives 5 to 7 mph – $40)

Boats have been built for budgets of $130 – $250 and building time has been as short as 4.5 or 5.5 hours from two experienced builders, though a nice job will take around 20 hours for a first time builder.

A couple of weekends.

simple homebuilt plywood canoe

Generally the lower end of the prices is building in Canada or the USA where materials are a lot cheaper than the rest of the world.

A Quick Canoe Review Here

Quick Canoe Plan – two weekends work for a handsome, light wooden canoe

What both Plywood Canoes have in Common – Quality Plans

The things the two plans have in common are the detail in the plans.

Anyone can build either of these boats following the step by step instructions.

There are several photoessays from home boatbuilders of different experience on my forum and the consensus is the plans are pretty good. I also update the plans using feedback from builders, so as time goes by the plans improve even more.

Final Analysis – Building Process differences in Plywood Canoes

Ok … so how to choose between these two boats.

Eureka – Lighter weight, less materials, longer build.

The Eureka is based on classic canoe touring shapes from a time when canoes were used for real transport. Everything from delivering the milk or mail, heading off for six months collecting beaver pelts – less common today, but the main idea is the boats had to work well whatever the conditions were like. They had to travel real distance and be efficient and track well despite wind and waves.

So the Eureka canoe paddles very nicely. It will greatly outperform the average fibreglass boat (though there are some very good classic shapes available in North America in fiberglass – but none in most of the rest of the world). The wooden boat is also about half the weight of most glass canoes. A typical Eureka built with Gaboon comes in around 45 lbs (20kg) but making some effort and building of thinner ply you can get down to 33lbs (15kg). Great for portages and getting it on the car roof. It is built by the stitch and glue method.

Eureka being assembled by the stitch and glue method.

Quick Canoe – a bit more plywood – a low cost build – very fast assembly

The Quick Canoe is a much simpler shape, but I have kept the classic sheerline of a “proper canoe”. The unusual skeg/keel arrangement is to overcome the normally crappy directional stability of three panel canoes.  The skeg/keel can be reduced if more manoeuvrability is required for various uses but it is about right for lake travelling as it is.

arthur heading off for 2 weeks in missouri. Quick Canoe builds in a couple of weekends. Cheaper than hiring! storer boat plans

The Quick Canoe is made of only three panels and it is suitable for using duct or gaffer tape to hold it together while the filleting or glass taping happens on the inside of the boat.  This is a not a method that will work with any boat shape (don’t try it with the Eureka!!!), but it has been trialled through several boats with the Quick Canoe and seems to work quite well. While I am a great believer in epoxy to reduce maintenance and reliable construction the Quick Canoe – as a cheap project – would be fine in good exterior plywood and with polyester resin and glass tape.  It won’t last as long as an epoxy one … but at this price … who cares!   It is way more ecologically sound than a full glass or plastic boat.

The Quick Canoe gets taped together before flipping and epoxy filleting or glass taping the inside

Tough enough to carry around .. the two Quick Canoes being built in France the week before a week long tour down the Loire.

quick canoe assembled with duct tape - tough enough to carry and move around before epoxying. storer boat plans

And the Quick Canoes look just right in use and carry big loads

Two Quick Canoes and a skin on frame kayak on a week long tour of the Loire River.

So the summary is … if you want a really nice paddling canoe, the Eureka is a great choice – inexpensive, lightweight, easy to build, very nice to paddle.  If you want the simplest, cheapest and fastest to build then the Quick Canoe is a good choice.

And both can be set up as sailing canoes.

1/ Eureka Canoe Main Page
2/ Quick Canoe Main Page including videos
3/ Plywood Canoe Plans and ordering info
4/ DIY – Several Canoes then you need a triple storage rack

Two ways of converting a Paddling Canoe into a Sailing Canoe

Link – 4 Sailing Canoe Plans in Plywood plus an outrigger canoe