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...Ken ...Ken is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 5
Default Rebuilding 60 yr.old ceder runabout:


"John" wrote in message
oups.com...

sal wrote:
Hello boat people. I am trying to rebuild an old cedar lapstrake boat .
advice please. Some of the hull planks 3/8" cedar have longitudinal
cracks
and I would like to fill them with some type of compound not sure what
to
use. I understand lapstrake design are hard to rebuild as covering with
cloth and epoxy are not recommended.

Ron-
I agree with your idea that covering with epoxy (and cloth) would be a
bad idea for your cedar-strip boat.
I understand your message to mean that the planks have
split/cracked-not that the joints between the planks have opened up.
Although I haven't repaired this problem in a boat, it's common in the
guitar-building and repair hobby- another interest of mine.
Usually there is dirt in the crack, which makes repair tricky. First
thing is to get the humidity level up to near what the boat will
experience once it is back in use- if the boat's been stored in a hot
barn or similar, it will have dried out and that will have caused the
cracking. If you fill the crack when the plank is very dry, it may
cause problems later when the wood expands.

The general approach I've used is to run a (thin) saw blade in the
crack to clean it out and glue a thin piece of wood into the crack. I'd
use polyurethane or epoxy glue for this, in a boat.



John


I would also use a polyurethane like Sikaflex for the larger cracks and use
an epoxy like West Systems for the finer cracks.
The polyurethane with allow movement, which you will need on the larger
cracks and the epoxy will flow deeper into the smaller cracks.

You may also want to consider if it is necessary to run a thin bead of
polyurethane along the lap joins on the exterior of the hull.

...Ken