Bill Burruss
Well-known member
All,
Here are some dodger pictures you may be interested in. After 6 years, I got around to putting a dodger on my Devlin Broadbill. Actually took the time to make 2 dodgers- one is open water grey, and the other is camo. I also made a cockpit cover with one side grey, the other camo, so that it is reversible. Both dodgers are made from Cordura 1000 and sewn on a home sewing machine w/nylon thread and 18 gauge (best) or 16 gauge needles.
The frame is out of 7/8 inch aluminum tubing, which I bent with a conduit metal bender. This is the layout board I used to keep it symmetrical. Made several test bows from 3/4 inch conduit before bending the aluminum.
The leading edge of the dodger is held on with aluminum awning rail. Again, symmetry was important to me, so I bent one side to the boat, took it off, traced the pattern on a 2x8, then bent the second to match the line. Note the cuts (made with the trusty Dremel tool) every 1, 2 or 4 inches to allow bending. The bottom edge of the dodger is doubled over and sewn about an inch up so that a rope can be run through it. This is run through the awning rail to hold the dodger on.
The structure set up for pattern making.
Tape pattern.
Laying out the pattern on the camo Cordura 1000.
Here is the open water configuration.
Have not tried this configuration for open water hunting yet. Right now the boat is grassed for other duck habitat. It has the camo dodger on it, and I covered the top of the deck and dodger with dyed raffia grass.
For contrast, here is how I attached the dodger for my BB2.
Have a great season!
-Bill
Here are some dodger pictures you may be interested in. After 6 years, I got around to putting a dodger on my Devlin Broadbill. Actually took the time to make 2 dodgers- one is open water grey, and the other is camo. I also made a cockpit cover with one side grey, the other camo, so that it is reversible. Both dodgers are made from Cordura 1000 and sewn on a home sewing machine w/nylon thread and 18 gauge (best) or 16 gauge needles.
The frame is out of 7/8 inch aluminum tubing, which I bent with a conduit metal bender. This is the layout board I used to keep it symmetrical. Made several test bows from 3/4 inch conduit before bending the aluminum.

The leading edge of the dodger is held on with aluminum awning rail. Again, symmetry was important to me, so I bent one side to the boat, took it off, traced the pattern on a 2x8, then bent the second to match the line. Note the cuts (made with the trusty Dremel tool) every 1, 2 or 4 inches to allow bending. The bottom edge of the dodger is doubled over and sewn about an inch up so that a rope can be run through it. This is run through the awning rail to hold the dodger on.

The structure set up for pattern making.

Tape pattern.

Laying out the pattern on the camo Cordura 1000.

Here is the open water configuration.


Have not tried this configuration for open water hunting yet. Right now the boat is grassed for other duck habitat. It has the camo dodger on it, and I covered the top of the deck and dodger with dyed raffia grass.
For contrast, here is how I attached the dodger for my BB2.


Have a great season!
-Bill
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