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JustWaitAFrekinMinute! JustWaitAFrekinMinute! is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2009
Posts: 905
Default A better boat building material

On Jul 1, 3:09*pm, Frogwatch wrote:
On Jul 1, 3:04*pm, HK wrote:





Vic Smith wrote:
On Wed, 1 Jul 2009 11:00:40 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:


On Jul 1, 1:42 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Wed, 1 Jul 2009 10:09:24 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:
I'd like to see a true high tech wood composite. *Maybe bamboo
alternating with carbon fiber/ epoxy and then bamboo running at right
angles to the first. *This would be lighter and stronger than marine
ply. *On the outsides it would be skinned with a lighter glass than we
use for boats now like my Tolman.
It's called cold molding.
http://www.cwb.org/cold-molded-boat-building-2009
Been around for years.
Building a cold-moulded wood boat requires...well...the sort of skill
that comes from experience. But it does produce beautiful boats.
All glass boats are too heavy requiring too much fuel. *Aluminum boats
are good but welding them right requires more skill than most boat
companies can afford and they are difficult to repair.
Above the waterline, foam/glass is ok but below the water, no.
Loogy, I am not a ME but a physics geek. *Carbon fiber is currently
expensive and if such a boat was struck by lightning, the result would
be bizarre.


Since you're still interested in the subject I posted a response I had
written to Wayne but didn't bother sending.
In that "efficient boats" thread.
Some weight examples, and my view that FRP is still pretty heavy and a
new material is in order.
Pie in the sky, but maybe you can come up with something.


--Vic


Transparent aluminum, of course. :)


HK: *I had forgotten what happens to carbon fiber masts when struck by
lightning. *Maybe Boron fiber..........- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Boron.. I remember the werid glass tubes they used to make boron
"thread" here in CT... Quite a process, pretty neat stuff. That was a
loooong time ago. I did not make the stuff, I was a sub contractor on
the facility...