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#2
posted to rec.boats.building
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"I am Tosk" wrote in message
... In article 4c685479-5e3d-489a-87e5- , says... On Nov 29, 6:28 pm, "Bob La Londe" wrote: I find it interesting that a lot of the small boat aluminum designs seem to say the main hull should be 3/16 and yet .100 is used in a heck of a lot of commercially available small boats. .125 is considered heavy duty. Is it just CYA? Anyway, getting back to my original point. A lot of commercially available boats seem to be made out of a lot light sheet than the designers are reccomending in the boat plans they are selling. http://www.seaarkboats.com/boat.php?...&boat=Big+Easy For example: The link above is to a medium V design 24 footer. The specs says .125 thick sheet. I can't buy a plan to build a boat that size designed for .125 sheet. Most of the ones I have seen want to spec .1875 which basically means .190. Now why is that? Is it just the typical over building to cover your dearie aere, or are all those commercial boat builders building inadequate boats and damn the liability? I think the latter is the answer. I have seen a lot of large manufacturers with design and limit stickers that small home builders would never get away with. Look at the HP ratings for inflatables for starters. They can put a frekin' 40 horse on a boat and a wooden one the same size and shape will only hold a 3-5?? Yeah, but some designers go the other way to. Lots of designs by glen-l and bateau are rated by them much lower than if you plug in the USCG formulas from their backyard boat builder pamphlet for the craft in question. P.S. I have visited your site before and found a very informative. |
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#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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In article , says...
"I am Tosk" wrote in message ... In article 4c685479-5e3d-489a-87e5- , says... On Nov 29, 6:28 pm, "Bob La Londe" wrote: I find it interesting that a lot of the small boat aluminum designs seem to say the main hull should be 3/16 and yet .100 is used in a heck of a lot of commercially available small boats. .125 is considered heavy duty. Is it just CYA? Anyway, getting back to my original point. A lot of commercially available boats seem to be made out of a lot light sheet than the designers are reccomending in the boat plans they are selling. http://www.seaarkboats.com/boat.php?...&boat=Big+Easy For example: The link above is to a medium V design 24 footer. The specs says .125 thick sheet. I can't buy a plan to build a boat that size designed for .125 sheet. Most of the ones I have seen want to spec .1875 which basically means .190. Now why is that? Is it just the typical over building to cover your dearie aere, or are all those commercial boat builders building inadequate boats and damn the liability? I think the latter is the answer. I have seen a lot of large manufacturers with design and limit stickers that small home builders would never get away with. Look at the HP ratings for inflatables for starters. They can put a frekin' 40 horse on a boat and a wooden one the same size and shape will only hold a 3-5?? Yeah, but some designers go the other way to. Lots of designs by glen-l and bateau are rated by them much lower than if you plug in the USCG formulas from their backyard boat builder pamphlet for the craft in question. P.S. I have visited your site before and found a very informative. Thanks. It's been a while since I left the shop to move north and take care of Dad. In case anyone wondered where the heck I went ![]() Scotty. I do plan on returning to the shop someday if I can... |
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