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building a pair of oars
hi all,
we went rowing on the maribrynong river in Melbourne, Australia yesterday. The boat went well but the oars and particulary the rowlocks left a lot to be desired. We can do some work on the rowlocks and improve them my using a closer fit between the rowlock pin and the rowlock socket to stop the rattle. We wil also add a spacer to rasie the rowlock becuase on the backstroke a plastic fairing on the oar was scraping on the gunnel. As to getting a new pair of oars I have found a site but it requires having a shaft of 49mm diameter timber. As to making something like this how practical is it to make a makeshift lathe using an electic drill and then to shape some sqare section timber. I have contacted a supplier of rowing sculls and they can provide me with a pair of rowlocks for $120, good but a bit steep. A single oar we have costed at $200 Aust!!, a bit steep, thus our interest making out own. help with how to turn the timber or a cheaper quality rowlock supplier in australia would be very much appreciated. regards, n peter evans |
building a pair of oars
Woodenboat magazine has a very good forum where there are many people,
including some in OZ, who will point you to plans and very good books and other resources for oars . Find it here. http://www.woodenboatvb.com/vbulletin/upload/ Ask your question there. The bronze rowlocks I use on ordinary dinghies cost about $20 US per pair and the timber for a good pair of oars would be well under $100 US. "peter E" wrote in message oups.com... hi all, we went rowing on the maribrynong river in Melbourne, Australia yesterday. The boat went well but the oars and particulary the rowlocks left a lot to be desired. We can do some work on the rowlocks and improve them my using a closer fit between the rowlock pin and the rowlock socket to stop the rattle. We wil also add a spacer to rasie the rowlock becuase on the backstroke a plastic fairing on the oar was scraping on the gunnel. As to getting a new pair of oars I have found a site but it requires having a shaft of 49mm diameter timber. As to making something like this how practical is it to make a makeshift lathe using an electic drill and then to shape some sqare section timber. I have contacted a supplier of rowing sculls and they can provide me with a pair of rowlocks for $120, good but a bit steep. A single oar we have costed at $200 Aust!!, a bit steep, thus our interest making out own. help with how to turn the timber or a cheaper quality rowlock supplier in australia would be very much appreciated. regards, n peter evans |
building a pair of oars
peter E wrote:
As to getting a new pair of oars I have found a site but it requires having a shaft of 49mm diameter timber. As to making something like this how practical is it to make a makeshift lathe using an electic drill and then to shape some sqare section timber. Nothing says oars have to be round the full length. It is easy to make them octaganol too with a saw. For a round area in way of the locks, a plane and/or rasp will do it. So would a quarter round router bit of the proper size. Shafts can be made by gluing up thinner stock too. Here's a link to some easily constructed oars. I made and use them, cost maybe $15-$20 for the pair... http://bateau.com/free/oarimages/simple_oars.pdf -- 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 |
building a pair of oars
WoodenBoat magazine has a searchable index. I am sure there have been
articles on making oars. The usual way is to start with square stock, mark it for octagonal and then make it round where you want round. Blades can be either glued-up or cut from a solid (and larger expensive) piece. Making oars is joyful work and using your own oars is priceless. Dave "peter E" wrote in message oups.com... hi all, we went rowing on the maribrynong river in Melbourne, Australia yesterday. The boat went well but the oars and particulary the rowlocks left a lot to be desired. We can do some work on the rowlocks and improve them my using a closer fit between the rowlock pin and the rowlock socket to stop the rattle. We wil also add a spacer to rasie the rowlock becuase on the backstroke a plastic fairing on the oar was scraping on the gunnel. As to getting a new pair of oars I have found a site but it requires having a shaft of 49mm diameter timber. As to making something like this how practical is it to make a makeshift lathe using an electic drill and then to shape some sqare section timber. I have contacted a supplier of rowing sculls and they can provide me with a pair of rowlocks for $120, good but a bit steep. A single oar we have costed at $200 Aust!!, a bit steep, thus our interest making out own. help with how to turn the timber or a cheaper quality rowlock supplier in australia would be very much appreciated. regards, n peter evans |
building a pair of oars
On Fri, 15 Sep 2006 15:59:07 -0400, "Dave W"
wrote: WoodenBoat magazine has a searchable index. I am sure there have been articles on making oars. The usual way is to start with square stock, mark it for octagonal and then make it round where you want round. Blades can be either glued-up or cut from a solid (and larger expensive) piece. Making oars is joyful work and using your own oars is priceless. Dave Dave, "making oars is joyful work". What a delightful expression for the task. Thanks for that. Makes me want to break out the planes. To the OP. Went through the books I thought might possibly have oarmaking information and other than a chapter in one of Larry Chowning's excellent books on Chesapeake waterman's traditions of making sculling oars, I found only Pete Culler's book Skiffs And Schooners had part of a chapter on oars and Good Skiffs had a Culler followup. While Culler does have dimensions of an oar his comments of what makes a good oar and a bad one ring true and if you've had the experience of struggling with inadequate off the shelf oars you will understand immediately his logic as to how to make a good one. But who can read only one page of Culler....I am lost for the rest of the evening. Google produced much good information and I would recommend that as a good place to start. Regarding the lathe Dynamite Payson's site from the Google search has some good ideas about avoiding such machinery. Most of the oars I am familiar with, like canoe paddles, have the outside sections of the blades glued to a center section so as not to waste wood during construction These books may not be readily available down under so if you like, provided my scanner is still functional, I can scan them in and email to you. Respond to . Kiyu |
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