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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
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KLC Lewis wrote:
Well, there's flexing and there's flexing. Agreed. .... Essie is built exceptionally stout for a boat of her size, having been built back in '63 before scantlings for fiberglass boats had been developed. I've heard this a lot, but it's not 100% accurate. The Navy was very interested in fiberglass for it's small boats (gigs, whaleboats, utility boats, etc etc, which had been previously built out of wood). In the early 1950s they paid for, and published, a large scale engineering study of fiberglass including how well it stood up to UV. Lots of early boat builders used this reference. But a boat on the hard is unlikely to be supported the same way as the water holds her. Agreed again. The cradle or jackstands should be positioned to support the internal structural members, like bulkheads, directly. And fiberglass will exhibit 'creep' under consistent heavy load for a long time. But it won't creep if it's not loaded past the point of measurable deflection. .... The flexing we are talking about isn't "oilcanning" from scantlings that push the lower limit. Actually, oilcanning is annoying but not particularly bad for fiberglass. FG can withstand at least an order of magnitude more cycles of flexing than steel before fatiguing, in this respect it's far superior to metal. If given a choice between a hull that had oilcanning in some panels (for example, the big almost-flat section in the bows of many boats) and one that flexed over it's whole length from rig loads, I'd pick oilcanning. But it would be a lot better to have neither. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |