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Red wrote:
I hear ya on the flotation! ![]() A lot of people seem to think it isn't practical. It would indeed mean giving up some interior space, but IMHO many production boats could have positive flotation installed and give up maybe 15~20% of useable stowage. A lot of space could be used for flotation that is up in tight angles & inaccessible spots. The reason I asked is that I read an article somewhere way back on some boatbuilding site that kevlar wouldn't bond adequately to old poly resin. Can't think why that would be. It's just fancy cloth. More would depend on the surface prep & type of resin. .... I'm curious though, why would it be better for the kevlar to be on the inside? Wouldn't that make it less effective in a collision due to the layer being in tension so it wants to seperate? I would have thought that being on the outside would be better to provide a barrier to the forced entry. Could you explain further? Thanks I can try. A laminated structure almost always fails in compression... same as a mast BTW. As force applied increases and the structure bends, at some point the strength of the bond between layers starts to fail and the inner face of the bend, the skin that is under compression, starts to buckle. This is where local tears in the skin form. After this point failure occurs, the whole thing comes apart like a zipper until the strain is relieved. Kevlar is very very strong in tension, and along the tension face or skin will distribute load over a much wider area than conventional fiberglass cloth, thus avoiding critical point loading in the opposite compression face. OTOH if you're thinking of an object piercing the hull like an ice pick, having the Kevlar layer on the outside might not make much difference. In any event, having it on the outside is better than nothing. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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