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Michael Daly
 
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On 26-Aug-2004, (Eric Nyre) wrote:

Remember some of the words you used to describe Kevlar were "stiff"
and "light". Smack a rock, and "stiff" shears. Floppy bends, absorbs,
and survives. "Light" really isn't light if built for durability (see
weights above).


Light also means that it will transfer more of the force in bending the
hull to the gunwale. I've seen an ash gunwale snap in easy WW. The
Kevlar canoe was empty but for two paddlers and when they pounded over
a small haystack, the gunwale went into compression and popped.
I'd guess that a vinyl gunwale would have handled it; aluminum, maybe.
The problem is that the only way out for the gunwale is to buckle and
that may permanently deform the aluminum gunwale (unless, of course
it manages the load without buckling).

I certainly wouldn't recommend an ultralight Kevlar canoe in WW. The
hulls of those are too flimsy to take the pounding of a few haystacks.

The problem with the word "light" is that it doesn't quantify anything.
One light canoe might handle it, another not.

Mike