Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
hi im planning on building a canoe. Specifically, I would like to
build the 16 foot 'prospector' from moore's 'canoecraft' book, but the design is in the form of a lofting table. I know there are many books out there on lofting, but i have found them to be more convoluted and complex than i need for a simple little symmetrical canoe. The full size plans are available for purchase, but I would I like learn how to loft. Can anynoe provide a brief tutorial on how to loft canoe plans or maybe provide links to any known web pages which *clearly* and as simply as possible methodically describe how to loft -ideally canoes and specifically from the tables in canoecraft- or other small simple boats? |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
you don't need to loft that boat. you cut out the station moulds and set
them up on a strongback. you lay a strip on at different points to check for "fairness". when the moulds are fair you start construction. there are photos of stripper construction on various Internet websites. try a search for the websites at www.google.com. sebastian ) writes: hi im planning on building a canoe. Specifically, I would like to build the 16 foot 'prospector' from moore's 'canoecraft' book, but the design is in the form of a lofting table. I know there are many books out there on lofting, but i have found them to be more convoluted and complex than i need for a simple little symmetrical canoe. The full size plans are available for purchase, but I would I like learn how to loft. Can anynoe provide a brief tutorial on how to loft canoe plans or maybe provide links to any known web pages which *clearly* and as simply as possible methodically describe how to loft -ideally canoes and specifically from the tables in canoecraft- or other small simple boats? -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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 |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "William R. Watt" wrote in message ... you don't need to loft that boat. you cut out the station moulds and set them up on a strongback. you lay a strip on at different points to check I realize OP and your comment relate to lofting (or not lofting) with regards to a canoe. I assume this would be from a table of offsets as developed from line drawings. This may work for a small craft where correction to the molds can be fairly simple. However, I would strongly encourage a prospective builder of a larger boat to do a full lofting operation. The reason being that the lines and offset provided in a set of plans are to the outside of the hull and it is not feasible, using manual methods, to simply deduct the planking thickness due to the complex curves or angles of the lines. (If the design were done on a computer, the designer can now perform this operation and provide this for mold building.) It is true that the table of offsets might be use in the molds are external molds and the planking laid inside. I've heard of this method but have never used it since the fitting of the strip planks would be more difficult, IMHO. -- My opinion and experience. FWIW Steve s/v Good Intentions |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In my older edition of Canoecraft, what's provided is most of a conventional
table of offsets. You do need to loft and fair the 'body plan', the sections through the boat at seven or eight stations. You'll need a 2' x 2' sheet of plywood. Paint it flat white. I didn't find whether the given offsets are to the outside or the inside of the planking. I'd ask the author. If to the outside, you'll need to deduct plank thickness when taking patterns for mold stations. I wouldn't try to loft/fair the waterlines or buttocks. When fairing the body plan, be aware of the relation between successive ststions. Rather. i'd get out and erect the station molds, then using a planking strip or batten, look for bumps and hollows in the 'setup'. These need to be trimmed or shimmed. Any book on lofting will cover this basic stuff. Chapelle's 'Boatbuilding' is probably easiest to find. sebastian wrote: hi im planning on building a canoe. Specifically, I would like to build the 16 foot 'prospector' from moore's 'canoecraft' book, but the design is in the form of a lofting table. I know there are many books out there on lofting, but i have found them to be more convoluted and complex than i need for a simple little symmetrical canoe. The full size plans are available for purchase, but I would I like learn how to loft. Can anynoe provide a brief tutorial on how to loft canoe plans or maybe provide links to any known web pages which *clearly* and as simply as possible methodically describe how to loft -ideally canoes and specifically from the tables in canoecraft- or other small simple boats? |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim Conlin ) writes:
In my older edition of Canoecraft, what's provided is most of a conventional table of offsets. You do need to loft and fair the 'body plan', the sections through the boat at seven or eight stations. for stripper construction, the strips are so thin and flexibe, that you need moulds no more than 1 ft apart. on a 16 ft canoe that means about 14 stations plus the stem moulds. since the hull is the same shape at both ends you only have to draw half the moulds and them make duplicates for the other end of the boat. you can draw all the half moulds on on sheet of cardboard and check them against the diagram in the book for accuracy and fairness before dissecting the cardboard to make plywood moulds. some peopel have used cardboard moulds. when setting up the moulds on the strongback the'll have to be checked again for fairness before planking. I don't think that's called lofting. Lofting means checking all the lines in the drawings against each other on a lifesize diagram of the boat. you'd need a 16 ft roll of drawing of paper. they actually used to do that and pin the drawing up on the wall or draw it on the floor. Its a good way of cross checking for mistakes. with so many moulds fairing is more accurate in stripper construction. setting up is described in chapter 7 (I have the 1983 edition). Moores does say to make sure the moulds are good and don't just borrow somone's and use them without checking they're fair (ie will produce a smooth-flowing hull without any bumps or sags in it). there is a photo showing the moulds I made of the prospector in the book on my website. look under Boats, Boat Designs, and 12 Foot Camping Sailboat (I think that's what I called it). The one photos shows a progression of moulds I did to model this boat and compare it with the prospector from Moore's book. You'll need a 2' x 2' sheet of plywood. Paint it flat white. I didn't find whether the given offsets are to the outside or the inside of the planking. I'd ask the author. If to the outside, you'll need to deduct plank thickness when taking patterns for mold stations. I wouldn't try to loft/fair the waterlines or buttocks. When fairing the body plan, be aware of the relation between successive ststions. Rather. i'd get out and erect the station molds, then using a planking strip or batten, look for bumps and hollows in the 'setup'. These need to be trimmed or shimmed. Any book on lofting will cover this basic stuff. Chapelle's 'Boatbuilding' is probably easiest to find. sebastian wrote: hi im planning on building a canoe. Specifically, I would like to build the 16 foot 'prospector' from moore's 'canoecraft' book, but the design is in the form of a lofting table. naw, a lofting talbe is something you draw a full size 16 ft diagram of the boat on. what you have in the book is a table of offsets which you use to draw life size diagrams of the moulds. I know there are many books out there on lofting, but i have found them to be more convoluted and complex than i need for a simple little symmetrical canoe. right The full size plans are available for purchase, but I would I like learn how to loft. Can anynoe provide a brief tutorial on how to loft canoe plans or maybe provide links to any known web pages which *clearly* and as simply as possible methodically describe how to loft -ideally canoes and specifically from the tables in canoecraft- or other small simple boats? just plot the points from the table of offsets. try a scaled down model first. one inch instead of one foot will give you a 16 inch model. I put the tables of offsets into a spreadsheet program and played around with the scaling when I was looking at the canoe shape. again, there are websites and other books on stripper construction you can consult. we have a couple other authours besides Moores on stripper construction in the Ottawa public library. 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 |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
When I built my prospector full size plans weren't available. I found
the instructions in the book to be pretty clear. Basically you just plot the points from the lofting table on a large sheet of graph paper then join the dots using a flexible batten to make a fair curve. Do that for each station. There's a site and forum witch might interest you http://www.bearmountainboats.com/ hi im planning on building a canoe. Specifically, I would like to build the 16 foot 'prospector' from moore's 'canoecraft' book, but the design is in the form of a lofting table. I know there are many books out there on lofting, but i have found them to be more convoluted and complex than i need for a simple little symmetrical canoe. The full size plans are available for purchase, but I would I like learn how to loft. Can anynoe provide a brief tutorial on how to loft canoe plans or maybe provide links to any known web pages which *clearly* and as simply as possible methodically describe how to loft -ideally canoes and specifically from the tables in canoecraft- or other small simple boats? |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi
"Drew Dalgleish" skrev i en meddelelse ... When I built my prospector full size plans weren't available. I found the instructions in the book to be pretty clear. Basically you just plot the points from the lofting table on a large sheet of graph paper then join the dots using a flexible batten to make a fair curve. Do that for each station. Isn't that what is already prepared, with full-scale plans ? P.C. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "P.C." wrote in message . .. Isn't that what is already prepared, with full-scale plans ? Fairing lines to a scale on a drafting board or a sheet of plywood, it "lofting the lines". Full scale is the only way to do a full loft. Sometimes in a very large vessel the loft will be to half scale so it will fit on the loft floor. The main objective is to get the mold station to produce fair lines on the finished hull. Adjusting the molds, after the fact is not the correct place to find the errors. I know that the OP was about a 16ft canoe. However the reason I jump in about using a full loft is because so often a first time builder will look for any reason or recommendation to skip the full loft and get started turning wood into a boat. Unless the designer has taken the results of a full loft (or the computer equivalent) and done the correction to the table of offsets, then the offset table should only be trusted for the full loft. -- My opinion and experience. FWIW Steve s/v Good Intentions |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi
"Steve" skrev i en meddelelse ... Unless the designer has taken the results of a full loft (or the computer equivalent) and done the correction to the table of offsets, then the offset table should only be trusted for the full loft. Year , -- but meanwhile the measures must be transfered onto the material, as the cut materials make up the actural hull. I mean you make the plans to be able to show the lines not on paper, but on the materials so they can be shaped into an assembly , ------- then with a heavy frame that must support a panel , there will be a gab , unless the frames are marked with changing angle both sides. --------- Realy the spline for me ,alway's was the spline you place ontop the rough timbers, before making them follow the planking some 90 pct. Realy isn't this a bit old fasion, when you can shape the whole framework from sheet material. Ever tried placing an oak frame in a Baltic trader ? --- if so you will know there are a need for better technology , did you ever use a vaccum cleaner to remove a rotten frame ? ------- Anyway first upscaling , then transfering must be less accurate, than acturly producing the actural frame ,cut directly from the computer drawings. This also allow for accurancy that make things possible ,that is more difficult or somtimes impossible with tradisional means. Like forming whatever assembly framework for whatever shape hull, in only sheet materials. P.C. |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 9 Apr 2004 21:28:17 +0200, "P.C."
wrote: Hi "Drew Dalgleish" skrev i en meddelelse ... When I built my prospector full size plans weren't available. I found the instructions in the book to be pretty clear. Basically you just plot the points from the lofting table on a large sheet of graph paper then join the dots using a flexible batten to make a fair curve. Do that for each station. Isn't that what is already prepared, with full-scale plans ? P.C. Yes but the OP is trying to save $75? by doing it himself. I'd probably do the same thing and if he wants to come to southern ontario he's welcome to take tracings from my stations. |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
viking ship plans ripoff | Boat Building | |||
viking ship plans ripoff | General | |||
Need books, articles, website to design a canoe (concrete) | Boat Building | |||
open canoe | Boat Building | |||
Outrigger canoe plans | Boat Building |