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#1
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My mahogany dagger board was damaged when I bought the boat used. I glued
it with epoxy and put some fiberglass around it and it has held up for a few years, but I don't think it will last. I bought some 8/4 white oak on ebay for almost nothing (100bf for $1.25), and figured I will build a new daggerboard while I had something intact to copy. The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. |
#2
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On Thu, 15 Sep 2005 22:11:16 GMT, "Toller" wrote:
snip Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. Google for "naca airfoils" Regards, Bruce Nichol Talon Computer Services ALBURY NSW Australia http://www.taloncs.com.au If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.... |
#3
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I assume you have the old board to use for a pattern of the cross section.
I know that white oak would be difficult to shape by hand plane or any of the power tools you mention. For my 3" thick plywood rudder, I use a 4" disk grinder fitted with a special wood carving wheel. This is a steel disk with chain saw teeth on it's edge. Very aggressive cutting, so go slow and careful.. The PacNW wood carvers use these along with their regular chainsaw tip to carve detailed statues. Just rough out your board shape and finish with the plane or belt sander. -- My experience and opinion, FWIW -- Steve s/v Good Intentions |
#4
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"Toller" wrote in message
... The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. I'd go for the power planer. A good one can take away 1.5mm (1/16") in one stroke, which means you can take away half of the thinkness of your blank in 16 strokes. Meindert |
#5
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Toller wrote:
My mahogany dagger board was damaged when I bought the boat used. I glued it with epoxy and put some fiberglass around it and it has held up for a few years, but I don't think it will last. I bought some 8/4 white oak on ebay for almost nothing (100bf for $1.25), and figured I will build a new daggerboard while I had something intact to copy. The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. Use your table saw as a shaper by sliding the blank sideways over the blade. It will leave concavities, a hollow ground shape you can refine more easily. A well made slide jig should provide a reagulare shape and remove most of the unwanted material. Don't be afraid to drill a few bolt holes in your saw top to hold special jigs, or use eccentrics to hold in guide slides. Cut strips to sit in grooves able to slide, lay ply on top, pin with brads, screw together from other side. with saw, route grooves the other way, make side slider jig. Screw on a fence to enable milling. Terry K |
#6
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![]() You can make transverse saw cuts and take out the wood with a chisel. Then clean up with a plane or whatever. Dont' go all the way in with the saw because the wood will not cut out smoothly. Practice on scrap first. If you can figure out some way to do it with a power saw it allows you to set the depth of cut. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-FreeNet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
#7
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"Toller" writes:
snip I bought some 8/4 white oak on ebay for almost nothing (100bf for $1.25), and figured I will build a new daggerboard while I had something intact to copy. The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. Question: Is this a massive plank or quarter-sawn strips glued together? If it is a massive plank you should count on it warping. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. This is probably the wrong answer but I actually mean this: Use the oak for something else. Buy some light wood like Western Red Cedar and shape a board. Add unidirectional carbon for bending stiffness and strenght. Sheat in glass-epoxy and paint. A WRC blank should be light enough to handle on the table saw. Cut grooves to a depth that just 'touches' the future profile. Use a power plane to remove material almost down to the future profile and then continue with a hand plane and long board sanding. Have someone calculate how much carbon you need and then use a router to cut out some material from the WRC board so you can add the carbon without ruining your profile. More on boards at: http://hem.bredband.net/b262106/Boat/dagger.html -- ================================================== ====================== Martin Schöön "Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back" Piet Hein ================================================== ====================== |
#8
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I'd go with Martin's recommendation of materials. A white oak board, while
maybe stable, will be too heavy to handle. Google for a NACA foil design program. For shaping it, I'd use a router as the shaping tool. Make a slotted 'bridge' which will guide a router over the victim. The bridge can run either the long way or cross-ways. If the bridge runs the long way, it can be straight but rest on curved templates at the ends of the board. If the short way, the bridge must be curved, but it will run on straight guides at the edge of the board. I'd favor the short curved bridge, which will flex less. "Schöön Martin" wrote in message ... "Toller" writes: snip I bought some 8/4 white oak on ebay for almost nothing (100bf for $1.25), and figured I will build a new daggerboard while I had something intact to copy. The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. Question: Is this a massive plank or quarter-sawn strips glued together? If it is a massive plank you should count on it warping. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. This is probably the wrong answer but I actually mean this: Use the oak for something else. Buy some light wood like Western Red Cedar and shape a board. Add unidirectional carbon for bending stiffness and strenght. Sheat in glass-epoxy and paint. A WRC blank should be light enough to handle on the table saw. Cut grooves to a depth that just 'touches' the future profile. Use a power plane to remove material almost down to the future profile and then continue with a hand plane and long board sanding. Have someone calculate how much carbon you need and then use a router to cut out some material from the WRC board so you can add the carbon without ruining your profile. More on boards at: http://hem.bredband.net/b262106/Boat/dagger.html -- ================================================== ====================== Martin Schöön "Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back" Piet Hein ================================================== ====================== |
#9
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toller,
I have been watching this thread, but did not have time to write until today. There seems to be a a multple of questions here and some interesting thoughts among the responses. First, If you glued the damaged board with epoxy and glassed also with epoxy, there is no reason it will not last as long as the mohogan holds out - that may be quite some time. Mohogany is a relatively light wood, but not that light. You will pick up probably 10-12 pounds. It was probably choosen for it's rot resistance and the ease of working. It is a very dimensionally stable wood which is why it is so valued by pattern makers. By "cut the corners off" I am guessing that you mean the long edges. If that is the case, we need to ask more questions here. Are you going to make this cut the entire length of the blank? If yes, just be sure you have pusher sticks handy and a friend to catch the plank and trim as they come out of the saw. The second cut will be much more exciting the than the first because of the small support area left on the trailing edge. If no, you still need the friend, but not the pusher sticks. Plus now the operation has a new twist because sawblades only cant one way. In one direction, you will have to start the cut as a pocket cut and saw out of the blank, and the other you have to stop in the blank. There is only one safe way to do this. Shut the saw down and then retract the blade. You will have to finsh the cut by hand. As to the actual section, yes, you can get there with the power plane and belt sander (look up supergrit belts - effective prices). If the boat is a class of any kind, the class site probably has the section available. If not, you probably want a modified four digit. I own code for this, but I do not know if it is available on the web - search. Cutting guide reference slots is not a bad idea, you will have a lot of wood to hack off before you get close to the sand-to-shape phase. You might consider doing that before you even "cut the corners off" because it will be easier to handle the blank then. Thinking is the Cheap thing to do. Matt Colie (I have been at this way too long) Toller wrote: My mahogany dagger board was damaged when I bought the boat used. I glued it with epoxy and put some fiberglass around it and it has held up for a few years, but I don't think it will last. I bought some 8/4 white oak on ebay for almost nothing (100bf for $1.25), and figured I will build a new daggerboard while I had something intact to copy. The blank is 44" long, 2" thick, and 15" wide. It weights 35 pounds. I originally intended to cut the corners off on my table saw, but it is so heavy that it doesn't seem particularly safe. So, I have been going at it with my 3" belt sander and my 2" power planer. Both would work, but they would take hours and hours of work. Any suggestions for a good way to shape my blank into an airfoil shape? I am thinking of buying a better planer, but hope someone here will be resourceful. |
#10
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On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 11:45:10 -0400, Matt Colie wrote:
snip Cutting guide reference slots is not a bad idea, you will have a lot of wood to hack off before you get close to the sand-to-shape phase. You might consider doing that before you even "cut the corners off" because it will be easier to handle the blank then. Well put. This was what I intended to describe but your command of the English language is clearly superior. I recommend Western Red Cedar (or similar light wood) for two reasons: 1) Easier to handle both while building and on the boat. 2) Easier to work on than oak. I have shaped plugs out of MDF-blanks this way. A plug for a rudder 1.8 m long and with a 30 cm cord took only one evening to shape. Painting, wet sanding, rubbing and polishing took much longer. Thinking is the Cheap thing to do. Indeed :-) Here are some more ideas on shaping foils if you don't want to make molds. * Strip planking using 6-8 mm thick WRC strips. Use external frames. Glass+epoxy inside, join halves and don't forget that you need a good structural member running down the middle of the foil. The exterior will need some final shaping, then add carbon as needed and wrap in glass and epoxy. Potentially lighter than the massive board for big boards but more work and less robust. * Central structural member made from WRC+carbon laminate. Foil shaped from foam cut by hot wire. Cover in glass+epoxy laminate. Note, this time the laminate is structural. My current boards were build like this some ten years ago. They are 2.5+ m long and has a 44 cm cord. New they weighed 12 kg each. /Martin |
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