Well any and all materials in the form of wood that we build boats with have been cut down and looses it life at that point. So its a matter of time before the wood finally gives up the ghost. We slow or retard the death by coating the wood and dealing with dings as they happen. We also know that there are many species of wood and the life can vary depending on the grains and the actual age of the wood when it was cut down. We know that plantation pine has little to no rot resistance to the wood because it lacks the proper resins for the lack of any scientific name. We also know that unlike white oak red oak is pourous and depending on how thorough a builder is with sealing the wood grains, the coatings can check out and allow dampness to enter and begin to turn to mold, rotting the wood.
Cypress will also react in the simular manner sometimes if the cypress is second growth too. We also know that some of the most exoctic plywoods like the Okumne lacks the rot resistance that even quality meranti does either. The cores of any plywood also plays a big role in the longivity of plywood that is gets fractured too. Some cores are crappy also making a boat inferior.
I apreciate the wood lesson but it has nothing to do with my question
And about that crude boat comment that I made? Yep a home cabinet guy decided to take his skills to another level and created a line of boats that used zero caulk, and what we now consider low end plywood, fir, even though the stuff was better many years ago and created a working hull for ugly weather and in turn the boats were also sold to hundreds of families as a pleasure craft from 1950 to 1972. Then the boats have been reproduced since then by amateur boat builders throughout the world too, using the same process. When I tell you that these people got more than two years out of their hulls without being babied, and without the expensive materials, the facts are there and you can decide for yourself if your early demise of your own boat appears to be an exception to todays rules of homebuilt wooden boats.
I think its nice this guy made a business out of his ideal. Were they called crude boats
If you would like I can provide you several shots of my no glass, chine built, scantly framed plywood hull, Ace hardware store paint and stored outside hulls and you can decide if I should cut them up and place the parts in the dumpster or if they are safe to give them away to my own kids and allow them to wander away from the shoreline into deep waters
Your welcome to send them if you want to.
So yes there are many variables. Abusing the boat or neglecting any and all hulls causing such a short life of two years is solely not the fault of any materials or the fault of any building method and a premature death of any. I am still unsure of how you can get an accurate and absolute answer to what appears to be a broadbrush request.
I dont know how much simpler I can make this. You answered my question you said you had one 7 years old ,you run clear water, and store under a cover.
Now if Bee has the time I would like to hear how his are stored how old they are and anyone else that has an unglassed chine log hull.
Neglect or misuse I will take into consideration ,but your interpretation of that doesnt apply to me ,just to your boats.
Thats a pretty boat and well preserved and would be that pretty for about a hundred yards on the Brazos, and everytime you went she would be upside down and you redoing the hull.
So it would not be a good boat for me.