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Boat House
Cover support ideas for tin boats kept on a mooring
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<blockquote data-quote="richg99" data-source="post: 416908" data-attributes="member: 4376"><p>Given the many thousands (maybe millions) of small boats that are moored on docks around the world, you'd think that someone could invent an easily mounted; wind and rain resistant boat cover. </p><p></p><p>I have a dock on only one side, and that is how many, many boats are tied off. Putting a cover on and then removing it four or five times a week just isn't practical. </p><p></p><p>Must be some way to add weights all around the bottom or magnetic snaps that could make the job a breeze. I could see a self inflatable bubble in the center to keep a tent-like slope on the cover to shed rainwater.</p><p></p><p>There is a million dollars or more waiting out there for the one who comes up with a solution to this never-ending problem.</p><p></p><p>richg99</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="richg99, post: 416908, member: 4376"] Given the many thousands (maybe millions) of small boats that are moored on docks around the world, you'd think that someone could invent an easily mounted; wind and rain resistant boat cover. I have a dock on only one side, and that is how many, many boats are tied off. Putting a cover on and then removing it four or five times a week just isn't practical. Must be some way to add weights all around the bottom or magnetic snaps that could make the job a breeze. I could see a self inflatable bubble in the center to keep a tent-like slope on the cover to shed rainwater. There is a million dollars or more waiting out there for the one who comes up with a solution to this never-ending problem. richg99 [/QUOTE]
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Cover support ideas for tin boats kept on a mooring
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