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I have just got a deal on 1200 BF of 1 X 6 X 5'2 rough cedar. $.12
/ bf. I have 10 plastic oil barrels, with as many more as I can load in my old cargo van, at 10 per trip, 15 bucks each, used for poly b, a wetting agent used by a local concrete plant. I have a bunch of plastic coated ss clothesline, A couple of moorings and an old 50 foot dock in ruins in my front yard. 20 feet beyond the rubble, the water drops off to 60 feet deep. I have built one 5' x 5' dock skeleton for 3 barrels, all in cedar, just for eyeballing. Cedar splits very easily. My riverfront is tidal, with a 2 foot range, and it freezes as hard and deep as only a canadian could love. I need suggestions as to how to engineer the most dock for the least additional money. I was thinking, since the cedar is lightweigh and a little fragile, that I might need to buy some heavier structural lumber and use the cedar for topping only, but I need to yank the docks for the winter, and I want to be able to do it with only one helper. I was thinking to run a cable between the moorings and dock the boat to the cable, leaving the lightweight, more or less free floating dock to be a gangway to the stone rubble dock ruin, which could be used to support a deck over the really rough part of the dock ruin out towards the end, which is a couple of feet underwater at high tide. I am thinking patio block footings amongst the rubble, and seek advice as to the most efficient (read cheap) engineering approach and, er, free designs (ahem!) TIA Terry K |
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