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Gone Angling ) writes:
I have a few other questions. I'm building a simple boat (cajun flat bottom 10 feet) as a starter project. The points of the bottom are plotted on a piece of plywood. What would i use to make a smooth curve? plastic electrical conduit is good. comes in 10 ft lengths at "Home Depot type stores". cheap and no need to rip a thin piece of wood which probably won't come out even anyway. Do you use a hand held jig saw to cut it out? yes but a jig saw wobbles more than a circular saw. I use a jig saw for cutting tight curves and small pieces. I want to put a fancy deck on it. Would a hardwood veneer plywood be ok? I'm not sure if it is rated for exterior use. Other material to use? decorative wall panels are not waterproof. I'd only use it above the waterline on a boat kept under cover when not in use. 1/4 inch ply is that equivalent to 6mm. Is 5.2 mm luan too thin for sides and deck. 5.22 mm lauan is 1/5 inch. Can i join plywood by a butt joint and a 1x 2 across the joint on the interior. two separate things. 1x2 is a framing. you can fasten panels so they end on a frame. a 4" wide piece of the same plywood is a good butt. fasten with glue and "clinched" (bent over and back in) little nails. people often butt join plywood with fibreglass tape soaked in resin. most people recommend epoxy resin but I've used cheaper polyester. All my materials are to be bought from a home depot type store. builders of small cheap boats use polyurethane cosntruction adhesive in a tube available from these types of stores. Bulldog PL Premium is the one most often mentioned. I use it. there are photos of my cheap plywood boats on my website (see below). its common for amateurs to build this way for themselves, not expecting a boat they can pass on to their grandchildren's grandchildren. Of my boats the Dogskiff and Loonie are lauan underlayment. The Delta is virola underlayment. I left the virola boat outside last winter and the plys were comming apart at the edge. Had to cut some off one end. I brought it in this winter. Otherwise the virola boat stays outside. I don't expect it to last long. The lauan boats are kept inside. (They hang on pegs on the garage wall.) They are holding up very well. The Dogskiff has been used 4 summers now and is in great shape. TF Jones had a lauan underlayment kayak 9 years, kept inside when not in use, and it was still in fine shape when he cut it up because he got tired of it and wanted to make a different boat. No great loss. good luck -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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 |
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