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Corelite (canoe hull material)
I'm looking at canoes made in the UK from a material called Corelite. I'm having trouble finding information on the material except that it is some kind of foam sandwiched between an inner and outer skin of some kind of plastic. Dealers are calling it 'the new hull material' etc. I'm wondering if it's a good material for canoe hulls. Obviously the dealers will be quick to defend it if they are selling the product, but does any end-user have any comments on its durability/strength/practicality, etc? TIA, Al D |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the
sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. Nothing about Brits, but they're 3K miles from here and you can't even make it a road trip. The Brighton Canoes price seems to be about the same as the typical ABS canoe in the US. There are other foam core plastics produced right here in the USofA (see Old Town Discovery series) and they seem to have the same characteristics: durable, not very expensive, on the heavy side. Corelite seems to be a polyethylene (kayaks are made of high density polyethelene), which is tough stuff. Steve Al D wrote: I'm looking at canoes made in the UK from a material called Corelite. I'm having trouble finding information on the material except that it is some kind of foam sandwiched between an inner and outer skin of some kind of plastic. Dealers are calling it 'the new hull material' etc. I'm wondering if it's a good material for canoe hulls. Obviously the dealers will be quick to defend it if they are selling the product, but does any end-user have any comments on its durability/strength/practicality, etc? TIA, Al D -- Steve Cramer Athens, GA |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 18:05:17 -0400, Steve Cramer
wrote: I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. I'm in the UK... There are other foam core plastics produced right here in the USofA (see Old Town Discovery series) and they seem to have the same characteristics: durable, not very expensive, on the heavy side. Corelite seems to be a polyethylene (kayaks are made of high density polyethelene), which is tough stuff. Yes, the outer skin reminded me of polyethelene (rather than ABS, which I think is harder). Al D |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
Al D wrote:
On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 18:05:17 -0400, Steve Cramer wrote: I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. I'm in the UK... Oh, sorry, my mistake. I know this is an international newsgroup and all, but somewhere in your original posts I got the idea you were in New York, Long Island maybe. Looking back, I see you once actually said "I'll be canoeing along the South Coast of England." Duh. I really can read. Really. So anyhow, you'll be in the position to tell USAns what this Corelite stuff is, as soon as you find out, 'cause I don't think there's any of it over here. Or at least Google doesn't seem to know about it. Although...and this will show how old I am, Hydra used to sell kayaks made of a foam core polyethylene back in the 80's and early 90's. They called it HardHull. There are other foam core plastics produced right here in the USofA (see Old Town Discovery series) and they seem to have the same characteristics: durable, not very expensive, on the heavy side. Corelite seems to be a polyethylene (kayaks are made of high density polyethelene), which is tough stuff. Yes, the outer skin reminded me of polyethelene (rather than ABS, which I think is harder). Steve -- Steve Cramer Athens, GA |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
Steve Cramer wrote in news:VzZmg.440$M_7.289
@fe02.lga: I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. Nothing about Brits, but they're 3K miles from here and you can't even make it a road trip. That certainly hasn't seemed to influence the popularity of VCP (or whatever they're called now), NDK, or P&H kayaks in the U.S. Personally, I'm always a bit leary of new composite layups touted as the latest thing since sliced bread since the technology has been proven. Given that the lifespan of a kayak can easily surpass ten years (my glass VCP Skerray is 17 years old and still paddles quite nicely) I'd be pretty ****ed if I bought a new kayak only to find out that the hot new composite layup delaminates after a couple of years. |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
Steve Cramer wrote in
: Al D wrote: On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 18:05:17 -0400, Steve Cramer wrote: I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. I'm in the UK... Oh, sorry, my mistake. I know this is an international newsgroup and all, but somewhere in your original posts I got the idea you were in New York, Long Island maybe. Looking back, I see you once actually said "I'll be canoeing along the South Coast of England." Duh. I really can read. Really. So anyhow, you'll be in the position to tell USAns what this Corelite stuff is, as soon as you find out, 'cause I don't think there's any of it over here. Or at least Google doesn't seem to know about it. Although...and this will show how old I am, Hydra used to sell kayaks made of a foam core polyethylene back in the 80's and early 90's. They called it HardHull. I believe that there were also a few Old Town kayak models that used a polyethelene foam core layup. |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
John Fereira wrote:
Steve Cramer wrote in news:VzZmg.440$M_7.289 @fe02.lga: I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. Nothing about Brits, but they're 3K miles from here and you can't even make it a road trip. That certainly hasn't seemed to influence the popularity of VCP (or whatever they're called now), NDK, or P&H kayaks in the U.S. Yeah, but we buy them from a US dealer, not Brighton Canoe. All of the sites talking about Corelight seem to be retailers. Not that you couldn't buy an 80# canoe from Brighton Canoe, I just think it wouldn't be a great idea. I own one car built in Germany and another built in Japan, but I didn't buy them from a German or Japanese retail dealer, I bought them from the dealer across town. Steve -- Steve Cramer Athens, GA |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 19:13:12 GMT, John Fereira
wrote: Steve Cramer wrote in news:VzZmg.440$M_7.289 : I tried to find some info because I've never heard of the stuff. All the sites Google pulled up were in the UK, and buying a plastic canoe from a dealer in the UK if you live in the US can't be clever. Nothing about Brits, but they're 3K miles from here and you can't even make it a road trip. That certainly hasn't seemed to influence the popularity of VCP (or whatever they're called now), NDK, or P&H kayaks in the U.S. Personally, I'm always a bit leary of new composite layups touted as the latest thing since sliced bread since the technology has been proven. Given that the lifespan of a kayak can easily surpass ten years (my glass VCP Skerray is 17 years old and still paddles quite nicely) I'd be pretty ****ed if I bought a new kayak only to find out that the hot new composite layup delaminates after a couple of years. Thanks for the input. The danger of delaminating hadn't occurred to me. What I am mostly concerned about is that the outer skin of plastic is quite thin, I'm told... (thinner than on a canoe made of solid plastic) - so I am worried about that outer skin wearing through, after beaching the canoe enough times on shingle. That polyethelene plastic (if that's what it is) seems very prone to deep scratching. I'm also concerned about the inner core of foam being crushable, say, when a heavy person steps into the canoe while it's on dry land. But it's a relief to hear that such laminates have been in use in the US for years. That suggests to me they must be suitable and reliable. Al D |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 21:06:41 -0400, Steve Cramer
wrote: Although...and this will show how old I am, Hydra used to sell kayaks made of a foam core polyethylene back in the 80's and early 90's. They called it HardHull. Thanks for the info. I recall hearing about canoes (not sure of the country of manufacture) made of a material called Royalex, which also sounded like what we are talking about. It's the thickness of the outer skin that concerns me more than anything. (How much underside scratching it will take, etc.) Al D |
Corelite (canoe hull material)
On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 18:05:17 -0400, Steve Cramer
wrote: Corelite seems to be a polyethylene (kayaks are made of high density polyethelene), which is tough stuff. Tough in some respects, for sure. However, my impression is that it is softer than, say, ABS, and therefore more prone to deep scratching. That's not usually a problem if the hull is thick enough. But I suspect that the thickness of the outer skin of this Corelite is probably quite thin. One of the main selling-points of the material is that hulls made of it are lighter than hulls with similar rigidity made of solid plastic. I assume they can only achieve increased lightness by using less plastic. Al D |
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