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Adventures in Lofting
I thought I was a pretty good draftsman.
At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and glggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard |
Adventures in Lofting
"cavelamb himself" wrote: But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. By defination, you're hull is "fair" when your arms are so tired you can no longer pick up a fairing boardG. Lew |
Adventures in Lofting
"Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "cavelamb himself" wrote: But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. By defination, you're hull is "fair" when your arms are so tired you can no longer pick up a fairing boardG. Lew Amen to that Lew, but I have a great solution to the sore arms problem. When I started fairing our mahogany runabout I called in some favors from my youngest son. He is 6'3" of solid muscle. I just showed him what to do and he faired pretty much the whole hull. Tom Check out our boat www.edison-marine.com |
Adventures in Lofting
Delburt D wrote:
"Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "cavelamb himself" wrote: But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. By defination, you're hull is "fair" when your arms are so tired you can no longer pick up a fairing boardG. Lew Amen to that Lew, but I have a great solution to the sore arms problem. When I started fairing our mahogany runabout I called in some favors from my youngest son. He is 6'3" of solid muscle. I just showed him what to do and he faired pretty much the whole hull. Tom Check out our boat www.edison-marine.com Having done quite a bit of aircraft fiberglass work I can relate to what you guys are saying. But MY issue was with _drafting_ the damned things. My mouse button finger is what's sore! Richard Trying again... http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm |
Adventures in Lofting
cavelamb himself wrote:
I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and giggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard Well Richard, This is no surprise to a third generation boat builder. The pictures look pretty good. It that first one your design? I don't like working with a baseline other than zero draft because I always get screwed up doing the TPI, trim and stability calculations. It does get a little easier when working on the lofting floor at full scale. The you can go back and correct the offset table. Matt Colie |
Adventures in Lofting
Matt Colie wrote:
cavelamb himself wrote: I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and giggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard Well Richard, This is no surprise to a third generation boat builder. The pictures look pretty good. It that first one your design? I don't like working with a baseline other than zero draft because I always get screwed up doing the TPI, trim and stability calculations. It does get a little easier when working on the lofting floor at full scale. The you can go back and correct the offset table. Matt Colie It's (supposed to be) a Catalina 27. |
Adventures in Lofting
cavelamb himself wrote:
Matt Colie wrote: cavelamb himself wrote: I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and giggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard Well Richard, This is no surprise to a third generation boat builder. The pictures look pretty good. It that first one your design? I don't like working with a baseline other than zero draft because I always get screwed up doing the TPI, trim and stability calculations. It does get a little easier when working on the lofting floor at full scale. The you can go back and correct the offset table. Matt Colie It's (supposed to be) a Catalina 27. Gee, I though it looked real familiar. Matt |
Adventures in Lofting
Matt Colie wrote:
cavelamb himself wrote: Matt Colie wrote: cavelamb himself wrote: I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and giggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard Well Richard, This is no surprise to a third generation boat builder. The pictures look pretty good. It that first one your design? I don't like working with a baseline other than zero draft because I always get screwed up doing the TPI, trim and stability calculations. It does get a little easier when working on the lofting floor at full scale. The you can go back and correct the offset table. Matt Colie It's (supposed to be) a Catalina 27. Gee, I though it looked real familiar. Matt I had this lame idea I was going to try when I pull my boat out for the winter. But I can't bring it home because it's too tall for the city standards, so I dunno now. Anyway, the idea was to level the boat and use a few laser levels to pick off the frames shapes. Set up the lasers so as to draw a vertical line every 2 or 3 feet and one horizontally at the water line. Add a couple of vertical lines to pick off the buttlines too (side shot). Take a digital photo - one front - one aft with the "waterline" reference at the same height on my tripod... Load the photos into CAD and trace off the frames. I can't capture the waterlines that way, but the buttlines and frames should be enough to get a fairly accurate start.... Should work ok, don't ya think? Richard |
Adventures in Lofting
Richard,
You have done a very good job of recreating a lines drawing on a computer, but your effort has nothing to do with lofting. Lofting is laying out on a wooden floor the full lines drawings full scale for the purpose of template generation, one on top of the other using the table of offsets as an initial starting point. Fairing the lines occurs during this process by driving nails in the floor at line intersections and subsequently bending an appropriate batten around the nails to scribe the line. When the battens fails to bear on a nail, the nail is then removed and redriven at the correct point. The offset from the table is then remeasured and entered into a new table that is called the "corrected table of offsets". Only then can templates be taken off the lofting for the manufacture of the individual components to stand up the actual hull. This is not done with a mouse while sitting comfortably in a chair. It is extremely hard work done on your hands and knees for many days on end. No computer will ever replace this task, even big ship yards still must bulletproof the table of offsets for CNC cutting machines to be accurate. Steve "cavelamb himself" wrote in message ... I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and glggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard |
Adventures in Lofting
On Nov 29, 2:41 pm, "Steve Lusardi" wrote:
Richard, You have done a very good job of recreating a lines drawing on a computer, but your effort has nothing to do with lofting. Lofting is laying out on a wooden floor the full lines drawings full scale for the purpose of template generation, one on top of the other using the table of offsets as an initial starting point. Fairing the lines occurs during this process by driving nails in the floor at line intersections and subsequently bending an appropriate batten around the nails to scribe the line. When the battens fails to bear on a nail, the nail is then removed and redriven at the correct point. The offset from the table is then remeasured and entered into a new table that is called the "corrected table of offsets". Only then can templates be taken off the lofting for the manufacture of the individual components to stand up the actual hull. This is not done with a mouse while sitting comfortably in a chair. It is extremely hard work done on your hands and knees for many days on end. No computer will ever replace this task, even big ship yards still must bulletproof the table of offsets for CNC cutting machines to be accurate. Steve "cavelamb himself" wrote in message ... I thought I was a pretty good draftsman. At least until I tried lofting hull shapes... Buildings, machine parts, entire aircraft - no problems. But fairing a hull can be a humbling experience. Well, for grins and glggles, here are a few of my efforts so far. http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/draft.htm Richard- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - :O |
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