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Question about stitch and glue
Hello.
I have a question about stitch and glue. I have been reading about it for some time now but I donīt understand one thing. After you have stiched the panels. http://bateau2.com/images/stories/ho...D_w_Frames.jpg And then glued and glassed everything. Do you then take the stitches out? Because they will be visible under the glass. Or donīt they? And if you are going to sand it then you will sand off the glass from top of them. Taavi |
Question about stitch and glue
Before I answer, let me tell you: I have never done stitch and glue
myself. Everything I have read about stitch and glue, though, says to remove the stitches. They pull them out, don't sand them. But!!! they remove the stitch _before_ the glass is put on: http://www.pygmyboats.com/Construction.htm Taavi wrote: Hello. I have a question about stitch and glue. I have been reading about it for some time now but I donīt understand one thing. After you have stiched the panels. http://bateau2.com/images/stories/ho...D_w_Frames.jpg And then glued and glassed everything. Do you then take the stitches out? Because they will be visible under the glass. Or donīt they? And if you are going to sand it then you will sand off the glass from top of them. Taavi |
Question about stitch and glue
Sam Devlin says pull them out. Many other boatbuilders don't care and just
cut them and leave them inside the hull. Have a look at http://www.clcboats.com/forum/bbs.pl forum - lot of great advices there. When building my S&G rowing shell I opted for "tabbing" method that involves filleting in 2 passes and pulling out the stiches inbetween. Either way (stiches in or out) the holes remain visible under a clear finish. Hope that helps. "Taavi" wrote in message ... Hello. I have a question about stitch and glue. I have been reading about it for some time now but I donīt understand one thing. After you have stiched the panels. http://bateau2.com/images/stories/ho...D_w_Frames.jpg And then glued and glassed everything. Do you then take the stitches out? Because they will be visible under the glass. Or donīt they? And if you are going to sand it then you will sand off the glass from top of them. Taavi |
Question about stitch and glue
"Dane" wrote in message
oups.com... Before I answer, let me tell you: I have never done stitch and glue myself. Everything I have read about stitch and glue, though, says to remove the stitches. They pull them out, don't sand them. But!!! they remove the stitch _before_ the glass is put on: http://www.pygmyboats.com/Construction.htm I've never done one either but I've seen both. I've seen some like the page pygmy page referenced above, and also others where the wires are left in and ground down with the resin. I guess it would matter on a boat showcasing woodwork. If a boat is to be painted (or gelcoated), I'd leave them in. Ed |
Question about stitch and glue
The thing is if you leave the stiches in you won't be able to apply nice
tiny little fillet on the inside of the seams under the fiberglass tape since you will need to cover the stiches with it. That means spending more $ of epoxy and much more weight. And looks bad if you finish it clear. "Ed Edelenbos" wrote in message ... "Dane" wrote in message oups.com... Before I answer, let me tell you: I have never done stitch and glue myself. Everything I have read about stitch and glue, though, says to remove the stitches. They pull them out, don't sand them. But!!! they remove the stitch _before_ the glass is put on: http://www.pygmyboats.com/Construction.htm I've never done one either but I've seen both. I've seen some like the page pygmy page referenced above, and also others where the wires are left in and ground down with the resin. I guess it would matter on a boat showcasing woodwork. If a boat is to be painted (or gelcoated), I'd leave them in. Ed |
Question about stitch and glue
Taavi wrote:
Hello. I have a question about stitch and glue. I have been reading about it for some time now but I donīt understand one thing. After you have stiched the panels. http://bateau2.com/images/stories/ho...D_w_Frames.jpg And then glued and glassed everything. Do you then take the stitches out? Because they will be visible under the glass. Or donīt they? And if you are going to sand it then you will sand off the glass I'm building a stitch & glue pram now. I used #14 copper wire for stitches...cut the twisted, outside ends off flush after filleting the inside, filled the outside gap with epoxy + Cabosil, ground that down smooth and fair, glassed the outside seams. Yes, they are visible under the glass but not after painting. Someone mentioned that wire left on the inside would interfere with filleting there. I didn't find that to be the case...the holes for the wire were quite close to the ply edges and tightening the wire pulled it down so very little protruded upwards. I suppose - had the wires been removed - that the fillets could have been smaller but personally I wouldn't want them smaller. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
Go to http://www.boatbuilder.org/mudpeep.htm. It will cover everything you need to know about a small stitch and glue boat. The stitching and removing is covered on the second page.
---Joel--- www.boatbuilder.org www.devlinboat.com |
Question about stitch and glue
I've built several stitch-n-tape boats, and ply on frame, etcetera.
Stitch-n-tape in my mind is by far the best approach and saves the most in time, money, and complexity. Many of the older texts and write-ups talk about using copper wire, or metal wire, etc to do the stitching and then illustrate various techniques for either leaving them in or taking them out. Some people use car batteries to heat the wire so they can pull them out, or grind them off and fillet right over them, or all sorts of other techniques. Believe me, everything has been done or tried, so you're going to find advice going in all directions. Sam Devlin's instructions are the closest to correct, but even his directions can be improved on. My personal opinion is that if you add one extra step, that all those other discussions are moot. That extra step is the use of epoxy 'tack welds' in between the stitches. They in effect replace the stitches prior to doing any fillet or glass work prior to the stitches being removed, and then the stitches can be removed at your leisure with no risk to the boat. Here's a picture of what I'm talking about (from my current project): http://www.glacierboats.com/tongass/...5-0533_img.jpg Here's a summary on materials and a suggested order of events for doing the stitching etc: Stitching materials that DO work: - Anything heavy enough to NOT break and that can be tied, twisted, or otherwise held in place easily: Copper wire that is at least 16 gauge in size, steel bailing wire (a bit stiff), nylon ties (various widths, see picture above). Stitching materials that DO NOT work: - Anything light weight that is NOT strong enough: Aluminum wire, thinner versions of copper or steel wire, or the smaller sizes of the nylon ties Order of events: - Drill and stitch panels, but leave them a little on the loose side - Square and level the assembly as appropriate to guarantee that the boat is square and level - Tighten the stitches - Double check square and level - Add 'tack weld' epoxy between stitches (epoxy thickened with wood flour or silica etc). On areas where the bends are hard, 'tack weld' on the inside and outside of the seams (both sides) - Remove the stitches (clip and pull) - Build the required fillets, tape the seams, etcetera as specified in your plans Some people will disagree with me, but note that it's likely because they've "always done it this way" (whichever way they are doing it) and have had good luck. That's completely fine too and you'll likely discover your own route to success. I'm just saying that what I do does work well and you can try it if you want ,..or not. It's all fun! Have fun, Brian "Taavi" wrote in message ... Hello. I have a question about stitch and glue. I have been reading about it for some time now but I donīt understand one thing. After you have stiched the panels. http://bateau2.com/images/stories/ho...D_w_Frames.jpg And then glued and glassed everything. Do you then take the stitches out? Because they will be visible under the glass. Or donīt they? And if you are going to sand it then you will sand off the glass from top of them. Taavi |
Question about stitch and glue
...That extra step is the use of epoxy 'tack welds' in between the
stitches. They in effect replace the stitches prior to doing any fillet or glass work prior to the stitches being removed, and then the stitches can be removed at your leisure with no risk to the boat. That's the tabbing technique I refered to in my other post. Other than what Brian suggested I might add that I used slightly thinner paste for tabbing (thinner than mayo) so that it penetrate the seams. I taped the outside of the seams with masking taped to prevent the mayo from pouring out, but that didn't proved to be necessary. I did have quite tight fit though. I was also worried that such a thin epoxy would pour into the wire holes and glue the wires, but they all came out easily. I left the wires in the extreme angles of bow and stern and pull them out after the final filleting. It all went much easier than I expected. |
Question about stitch and glue
I've seen several discussions about using a high quality duct tape (gorilla
glue brand duct tape) instead of the wires. This leaves no holes and accomplishes the same job as the wires. yes/no/I'm an idiot for even suggesting it. |
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