Need ideas for sourcing cabinets for my 36' Tri Cabin

This forum is for comments and the exchange of information relating to Trojan Boats and boating. Please do not post used parts or boats For Sale in this area. For general, non-boating topics please use our "General Discussions" section.

Note: Negative or inflammatory postings will not be tolerated.

Moderators: BeaconMarineBob, Moderator, BeaconMarineDon

Post Reply
Oxblood
Registered user
Posts: 72
Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 4:43 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC

Need ideas for sourcing cabinets for my 36' Tri Cabin

Post by Oxblood »

Hello all,

As you can see from the pic in this link the cabinets in the galley are, well a little lacking:

http://www.yachtworld.com/core/listing/ ... e=Photo+21

I was wondering if anyone had any good ideas for finding suitable cabinets. I do not want anything that is a melamine or veneer over fibre board, as that will not last well in the humid environs of a boat. I would prefer a Canadian supplier, ideally one that will either ship to Vancouver, or is close by.

Any ideas?

Thanks in advance and Cheers.
trojanmanXS
Moderate User
Posts: 276
Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2011 7:21 pm

Post by trojanmanXS »

There is a guy in my town that I utilized. I removed all the doors ,framework ect and dropped them all at this fellas house and he reproduced them all in cherry hardwood and finished them as well. If interested let me know and I'll get you his contact info. He's retired and does this as a hobby so the price was more then reasonable as he doesnt make a living from this work.
User avatar
prowlersfish
2025 Gold Support
2025 Gold Support
Posts: 12725
Joined: Sat Nov 05, 2005 6:56 pm
Location: Lower Chesapeake Bay ,Va

Post by prowlersfish »

Have you looked at the big box home stores or a RV / camper store ?
Boating is good for the soul
77/78 TROJAN F36 Conv.
6BTA Cummins diesels
Life is to short for a ugly boat :D
Vitaliy
Moderate User
Posts: 332
Joined: Sat Aug 27, 2011 12:59 pm
Location: Norfolk, Virginia

Post by Vitaliy »

i have a plan to redo mine as wel however my layout is a tad bit different.... i priced it out and have some plans laid out to make it myself however honestly if rather just pay someone to do this if the price ir decent....

if you want i can email you a few pics with the layout idea.
1974 F36 Tri-Cabin "Jorallyn"
Oxblood
Registered user
Posts: 72
Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 4:43 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC

Post by Oxblood »

trojanmanXS wrote:There is a guy in my town that I utilized. I removed all the doors ,framework ect and dropped them all at this fellas house and he reproduced them all in cherry hardwood and finished them as well. If interested let me know and I'll get you his contact info. He's retired and does this as a hobby so the price was more then reasonable as he doesnt make a living from this work.
Trojanmannx,

Thanks for the tip. I will keep it in mind.

I have looked at the boxstores. Not all of them seem to have a complete line of full wood wall and undercounter cabionets, but instead a mix. Undercounter all wood, wall the main boxd fibre and melamine with wood doors.

There are a couple of local shops that look promising and I will check them out.

Good tip on checking the RV stores, I had not thought of that.

Thanks for the ideas everyone.
User avatar
aaronbocknek
Ultimate User
Posts: 2080
Joined: Fri Sep 12, 2008 8:19 am
Location: baltimore, md (alexandria, va and middle river,md) PARKSIDE MARINA

Post by aaronbocknek »

RV stores are an excellent source to get things from. especially, at least in my case, if your 12v lights are the small square ones. i found plenty of lens/shade replacements at my local rv supply store and they were really inexpensive too. roughly a buck a cover.
1982 F-36 TRI CABIN ENTERPRISE
PARKSIDE MARINA IN MIDDLE RIVER, MD
aaronbocknek@gmail.com
Oxblood
Registered user
Posts: 72
Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 4:43 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC

Post by Oxblood »

Thanks Aaron. I will definitely make a trip to one of the larger RV dealers around here soon.
297Elegante
Sporadic User
Posts: 162
Joined: Thu Jun 24, 2010 10:11 am
Location: CT

Post by 297Elegante »

If your willing to spend a little money, a solid teak stile and rail with a teak plywood in the center would look sharp.
Boat: Silverton 34C T/270s, Gen
Oxblood
Registered user
Posts: 72
Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 4:43 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC

Post by Oxblood »

297Elegante wrote:If your willing to spend a little money, a solid teak stile and rail with a teak plywood in the center would look sharp.
Do you have any pics of your idea? WOuld that likely need to be custom built? I have a friend who is a cabinet maker and I could probably get some help from him.
User avatar
gettaway
Active User
Posts: 1142
Joined: Mon Feb 15, 2010 1:48 pm
Location: Coronado CA

Post by gettaway »

if the existing cabinet layout suites your needs, have you thought of refacing the exisiting cabinets? a 1/2"X 4' X 8' sheet of teak plywood is about 170.00 +-, you could make a lot of cabinet doors and drawer fronts with one sheet of ply. Rockler sells the edge banding, or you could up the style and do a teak frame with a 1/4" teak ply center.
Take a real close look at the wood frames you currently have, you might be surpised of the quality or at least that the frames are teak, I have been critical of the joinery on my particular year and model of Trojan, but they did a pretty good job with the space utilization and tie-in of the cabinets to the boat stringer / ribs, the cabinets are kind of intrgal to the design,

plus, do you plan to redo the lockers and cabinets in the staterooms and heads to match, it's a boat not a condo, and traditionally the joinery should flow & match throughout the boat

just a thought, spend some time on yachtworld looking at other boats, and try get a feel for what you want yours to look like, I know you'll come across other boats that have tried to use home cabinets and IMO they look out of place, some have done a great job and look fine, but fitting nice square standard cabinets in a mutli directional curved boat hull is difficult at best and you'll most likely lose a lot of space

bottom line, inspect the base structure of your exisitng cabinets very closely before you pull out the sawzall and sledgehammer, you might regret it once you see the lumber in the dumpster
1984 Silverton 37C
Silver Lining
Scott
Oxblood
Registered user
Posts: 72
Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 4:43 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC

Post by Oxblood »

gettaway wrote:if the existing cabinet layout suites your needs, have you thought of refacing the exisiting cabinets? a 1/2"X 4' X 8' sheet of teak plywood is about 170.00 +-, you could make a lot of cabinet doors and drawer fronts with one sheet of ply. Rockler sells the edge banding, or you could up the style and do a teak frame with a 1/4" teak ply center.
Take a real close look at the wood frames you currently have, you might be surpised of the quality or at least that the frames are teak, I have been critical of the joinery on my particular year and model of Trojan, but they did a pretty good job with the space utilization and tie-in of the cabinets to the boat stringer / ribs, the cabinets are kind of intrgal to the design,

plus, do you plan to redo the lockers and cabinets in the staterooms and heads to match, it's a boat not a condo, and traditionally the joinery should flow & match throughout the boat

just a thought, spend some time on yachtworld looking at other boats, and try get a feel for what you want yours to look like, I know you'll come across other boats that have tried to use home cabinets and IMO they look out of place, some have done a great job and look fine, but fitting nice square standard cabinets in a mutli directional curved boat hull is difficult at best and you'll most likely lose a lot of space

bottom line, inspect the base structure of your exisitng cabinets very closely before you pull out the sawzall and sledgehammer, you might regret it once you see the lumber in the dumpster
gettaway,

Thanks for the ideas. I will look more closely at the existing wall cabinets to see if they can be refaced. That would save a lot. Unfortunately, where the under counter cabinet used to be is now a vacant hole. The last owner had a small upright freezer there. Unfortunately the freezer packed it in.

I would like to find something suitable to place there (three drawers). Then reface the cabinet under the sink. As to the Aft stateroom, I would leave it as is. I want to either finish the wood myself or find something that is a close colour match to the existing teak in the boat.

Cheers.
Post Reply