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steveJ
 
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Default how do you bend wood into the boat shape?

Well Nick, I must admit that where I saw this was not on a boat.
Musical instrument makers have been doing this for centuries to bend the
sides of guitars and such. Though the wood was thin, I've seen a guitar
maker bend honduran mahogany using a two inch iron pipe that was set up
on a stand with a propane torch burning in the middle of the pipe.
water was sprayed on the surface of the wood to prevent burning. Worked
very well. I wonder if this concept/tool cold be used for larger pieces
for bending ribs on small boats. I see no reason why it wouldn't work
when making small ribs like for a kayak or something.

Old Nick wrote:
On Sun, 07 Mar 2004 03:29:04 GMT, steveJ vaguely
proposed a theory
......and in reply I say!:


I wonder if the idea of soaking wood before steam bending comes from
trying to bend kiln dried wood by introducing some moisture back into
it. Certainly green wood bends easier than kiln dried. But I agree, it's
the heat, not the water that allows wood to bend. I've seen dry wood
bent with only heat. Water was used only to keep the wood from scorching.



Woah! New! I have seen "fire bending" of wood. But it was always
associated with Asian/African boats etc, where green wood was used
anyway. The idea of fire bending really dry timber, with water to
prevent scorching only, is a new "twist" G
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