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[email protected] February 17th 06 08:50 PM

Cardboard Boats
 
I have to build a cardboard boat using only cardboard and duct tape.
What kind of shape/design should I use to make it go faster and go
through the water faster? Any building tips would be helpful too. The
paddles must be amde out of cardbaot and duct tape also.


Richard Lamb February 17th 06 11:08 PM

Cardboard Boats
 
wrote:

I have to build a cardboard boat using only cardboard and duct tape.
What kind of shape/design should I use to make it go faster and go
through the water faster? Any building tips would be helpful too. The
paddles must be amde out of cardbaot and duct tape also.


Well, is IS and on-topic request, I guess.

Any takers?

Ed Edelenbos February 17th 06 11:46 PM

Cardboard Boats
 
There are whole groups that do this... for the OP, have you tried searching
the net? I know I've seen sites on this. Some places have annual
competitions. I would think a perogie (sp?) style with double (or triple)
layer bottom, double layer sides, and lots of bulkheads. If you could find
boxes used for flowers (and sometimes seafood), they are sometimes wax
coated. I would think that would increase the life in the water.

Ed

--
When replying via email, replace spam with speak in the address.
"Richard Lamb" wrote in message
k.net...
wrote:

I have to build a cardboard boat using only cardboard and duct tape.
What kind of shape/design should I use to make it go faster and go
through the water faster? Any building tips would be helpful too. The
paddles must be amde out of cardbaot and duct tape also.


Well, is IS and on-topic request, I guess.

Any takers?




Alex February 18th 06 06:08 AM

Cardboard Boats
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
I have to build a cardboard boat using only cardboard and duct tape.
What kind of shape/design should I use to make it go faster and go
through the water faster? Any building tips would be helpful too. The
paddles must be amde out of cardbaot and duct tape also.

There was a query like this about a year ago. The consensus was, "use LOTS
of duct tape, and paddle fast!"
The guy did the race, and later reported that the organizers provided a
specific quantity of cardboard and of duct tape -- not enough tape to
waterproof both the outside and inside of his hull.
He rowed like crazy, water came over the gunwales, the cardboard got soaked,
and -- voila -- folding boat. But he had a ball!

Alex



Peggie Hall February 18th 06 09:10 PM

Cardboard Boats
 
Alex wrote:
There was a query like this about a year ago. The consensus was, "use LOTS
of duct tape, and paddle fast!"
The guy did the race, and later reported that the organizers provided a
specific quantity of cardboard and of duct tape -- not enough tape to
waterproof both the outside and inside of his hull.
He rowed like crazy, water came over the gunwales, the cardboard got soaked,
and -- voila -- folding boat. But he had a ball!


We're iced in and I have nothing better to do...

So it seems that it's not necessarily the fastest boat, but the one that
stays afloat the longest, would win this kind of race... So unless this
has to be a "one design" category, the shortest possible vessel with the
highest gunwales would be the ideal design. Divide the tape equally to
cover as much of both the outside and inside of the hull from the keel
up to "waterproof" it as high as possible...if the gunwales get wet and
melt, so what? At least you're still afloat--albeit a bit soggy--and
moving toward the finish a lot longer than if the boat folds up.

Does that make sense...or should I forget boat design and stick to
trouble shooting potty problems?

I don't suppose they'd let you use a foot pump bailer...?
--
Peggie
----------
Peggie Hall
Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987
Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and
Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor"
http://shop.sailboatowners.com/books...ku=90&cat=1304

CyberSam February 19th 06 12:25 AM

Cardboard Boats
 

wrote in message
ups.com...
I have to build a cardboard boat using only cardboard and duct tape.
What kind of shape/design should I use to make it go faster and go
through the water faster? Any building tips would be helpful too. The
paddles must be amde out of cardbaot and duct tape also.



http://www.riverdale.k12.or.us/~pnelson/milk/milk.html

http://tinyurl.com/9k3vw



Richard Lamb February 19th 06 04:43 AM

Cardboard Boats
 
Peggie Hall wrote:

We're iced in and I have nothing better to do...

So it seems that it's not necessarily the fastest boat, but the one that
stays afloat the longest, would win this kind of race... So unless this
has to be a "one design" category, the shortest possible vessel with the
highest gunwales would be the ideal design. Divide the tape equally to
cover as much of both the outside and inside of the hull from the keel
up to "waterproof" it as high as possible...if the gunwales get wet and
melt, so what? At least you're still afloat--albeit a bit soggy--and
moving toward the finish a lot longer than if the boat folds up.

Does that make sense...or should I forget boat design and stick to
trouble shooting potty problems?

I don't suppose they'd let you use a foot pump bailer...?



Reminds me of a T shirt I saw -

"I can fix ANYTHING!"
"Where's the duct tape?"

David Flew February 19th 06 10:05 AM

Cardboard Boats
 

"Peggie Hall" wrote in message
et...
Alex wrote:
There was a query like this about a year ago. The consensus was, "use
LOTS of duct tape, and paddle fast!"
The guy did the race, and later reported that the organizers provided a
specific quantity of cardboard and of duct tape -- not enough tape to
waterproof both the outside and inside of his hull.
He rowed like crazy, water came over the gunwales, the cardboard got
soaked, and -- voila -- folding boat. But he had a ball!


We're iced in and I have nothing better to do...

So it seems that it's not necessarily the fastest boat, but the one that
stays afloat the longest, would win this kind of race... So unless this
has to be a "one design" category, the shortest possible vessel with the
highest gunwales would be the ideal design. Divide the tape equally to
cover as much of both the outside and inside of the hull from the keel up
to "waterproof" it as high as possible...if the gunwales get wet and melt,
so what? At least you're still afloat--albeit a bit soggy--and moving
toward the finish a lot longer than if the boat folds up.

Does that make sense...or should I forget boat design and stick to trouble
shooting potty problems?

I don't suppose they'd let you use a foot pump bailer...?
--
Peggie
----------
Peggie Hall
Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987
Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and
Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor"
http://shop.sailboatowners.com/books...ku=90&cat=1304


It obviously depends on the rules, but if staying afloat and making progress
towards the finish are the objectives, i'd assume the hull will leak sooner
or later, and ultimately flood. So i'd start with a "frame" which would
preserve a boat-like shape, have some buoyancy and maintain stability with
the "hull" flooded ( and the occupant partly submerged - it would not
attempt to keep him/her dry). Then I'd add panels to make it look like a
boat.

Whilst rolls of cardboard wrapped in tape would have good strength and not
require lots of tape for waterproofing. I suspect they would be difficult to
join. So perhaps a square section wrapped in tape ?

Enough dreaming .....
David





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