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I built my first stitch-and-blue driftboat in appox 1983,
after reading a Dynamite Payson article in Wooden boat magazine. I've built quite a few since. I used to slobber epoxy putty all along the joining edges and then pull my wires tight, and then use a soldering gun to heat the wires (24 hours later) so I could pull the wires out prior to making fillets. Stitch and glue usually means your're trying to glue flat plywood panels together, prior to fiberglassing everything together in a more permanent step. I guess it all depends on your building method. If you build any vaguely dory-shaped boat around temporary trapezoid-shaped ribs, then you don't need to stitch at all. Just slobber the side-panel/bottom-panel chine edge with epoxy putty and then put the bottom panel on, and weight it down with car batteries, boxes of clamps, 5 gallon cans of drywall mud, what ever you have. I don't stitch nuthin no mo meself. The final fiberglassing steps are what makes it strong. If you are determined to stich, use nylon strap ties and bigger holes. They're generally easier to pull out. And it all ends up buried under a bunch of fiberglass anyway. |
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