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1967 Century 19' Arabian
El Jefe’ is a 1967 Century Arabian. I
always wanted one (since Jr. High). One owner until 1996, I bought hull #Q6767
and immediately took her to a friend’s restoration shop – Lenire Yacht
Restoration – in Seabrook, Texas. As I had the funds, we replaced major
portions of the chines, transom framing, and some bottom/transom/lower side
planks. Although the first owner did as well as he could to keep the boat in
repair during his tenure, the 70’s and 80’s were not an abundant time for wood
boat craftsmen.
Anyway, by this time I had had seen
another (Tom O’Rourke’s beautiful Arabian in Lake Tahoe) redone with wooden
decks. Lenire’s Gary Hoyle and I accumulated information on various options and
decided to replace the orinigal blue vinyl deck with ribbon-striped African
Mahogany. By 2005, although the boat had not been our of Gary’s shop (due to my
lack of cash to finish) it was obvious that the boat was going to need a new
bottom. Early 2006, we finished stripping the Arabian of equipment and turned
her over to start the bottom transformation. We replaced the old batten seam
bottom with a new “5200” style bottom.
JZ Custom Rails
mitered and welded the corners of the custom hatch trim, made custom handles,
welded the corners of the rub rails, and contoured the stainless upholstery
trim. Dockside Canvas completed the A&A upholstery kit.
Its amazing how much time each
modification absorbed. The deck is 3/8” higher…which threw – off the
windshield, cutwater, and rub-rails. The original vinyl deck no longer trimmed
the cockpit. Do we roll the underside of the foredeck with blue or black (black
– it matches the dash). The Century stain didn’t look as good as the red. The
king plank (we found a 22: wide piece of ribbon-striped African) and covering
boards needed to be black…but not too black to hide the grain. The upholstery
looked better in solid blue (originally, the boat was two-tone light and dark
blue with the light blue deck and lounge pads). The tach wasn’t gong back on
top of that dash. The original flooring was unavailable. New switches custom
machined to fit the special Century knobs. The swivel buckets were thru-bolted
(due to the owner’s needs!). New wiring/cut-offs for the batteries. And there
are minor things still to do.
The engine is the original 390
Interceptor with a top-end job and an Edelbrock intake and 750 Holley Marine
carburetor.
El Jefe was finished November 2006.
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