. A talon would be way to heavy and would look pretty silly on a crawdad , you need a power pole micro anchor for it . Also use 1/2 pressure treated plywood for your deck and 1 5/8 galvanized metal studs for your framing for the deck . Metal studs are more than 75 percent lighter than that pile of 2x4's you have on the ground. Also I would go with a 12 foot aluminum john boat if your gonna put some work into it , and trash that flat bottom plastic boat .I finally got rid of my waterlogged Pelican, and have decided to reclaim my Crawdad that sat by the side of my house for several years. Many years ago I inserted a full floor, and went totally overboard on it. I used heavy pressure treated wood, and needless to say the boat was very heavy. It got to the point when I was on a lake with a good chop, the waves would go over bow and a lot of water was getting in. I retired it to the side of my house tipped so that it wasn't exposed. however, a bad wind blew knocked it over. Before I knew it, it was filled with water and immovable. So, I took a bucket out and emptied it. Took out all the wood and foam, and I'm starting from scratch. I will post photos as work goes on. Any pointers will be appreciated! The boat will be trailered.
First question: I have an extra 8ft Talon that I'd like to put on it. Can the transom handle it?
wont matter what type of composite you use for the transom the boats only as strong as that green plastic it's made out of . As for putting an 8ft talon on the back of the crawdad I think your adding too much weight and an obstruction especially for a boat your suppose to use to get in hard to access areas . Also the weight capacity for a crawdad is much less than a 12 ft john boat and you'll be pushing the limits on weight capacity again , do what you feel is best but remember that crawdad can't be half the boat of a 12 ft aluminum that weighs virtually the same , I've owned both and to me the crawdad is'nt worth the time and effort .I am aware of the micro pole. I think it prices out around six hundred bucks. I'd like to try the Talon because I have it, rather than trying to sell it later. I don't care if it looks weird if it works. The transom is rated for a 6hp motor. I think that size motor is heavier than a single talon. I would say it probably weighs about 20lbs. I noticed the transom that Beaver Fever used from its photos. It looks like some sort of marine grade composite. Looks pretty stout.I think that might support it. I know that I've had an 82lb thrust trolling motor on that transom that was much heavier than that Talon.
As far as weight is concerned, when I brought the remnants of the old deck to the dump, it weighed exactly 220lbs. I'm figuring whatever wood I use for my new build will be less than 50lbs. So I don't think the additional weight of the Talon will make it too heavy.