archbuilder
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2009
- Messages
- 5,697
I would guess yes, just make sure it isn't a waxed resin.
I would guess yes, just make sure it isn't a waxed resin.
Hopefully by that time its someone else's headache.
so i have been watching a lot of FriscoBoater's videos, why is it he goes through soo much trouble to seal the stingers then drills into them i dont understand this, i get screwing down the floor to the stingers to aid in holding it down but i feel as though you are allowing for the possibility of water intrusion by temperature flux and humidity changes....
I might be wrong since it's been a while since I've watched his videos, but didn't he attach the deck to cleats he glued to the stringers? I know that's how I did mine... I glued 2 x 2's to the stringers and bulkheads and then attached the deck to those. Nothing was screwed directly into the stringers.
I'm almost at the end of my 3rd 5 gal bucket of 435 and will probably order it by the gallon after this one. I'd order 1708 along with the CSM. I ordered 15 yards of each and I'm getting close to end but I'm out of both and ordered another 5 yards of each. It just seems to be never ending.
I'm looking forward to watching your build!
he used cleats that he flipping screws into the stringers!!!! like hot darn lol why did you just do that lol, he claimed in the build that i was watching, that the places he screwed into would be 100% dry and never see water.... well... my momma told me if you cut a hole in it, its gonna leak......
also how big is the boat you are doing????? my mine is 14 foot i do believe, maybe 16.... need to look at the title again lol. and from watching Frisco, it seems like the 1708 is what really drinks up the resin
Your list includes a LOT of CSM which is okay for non structural work and waterproofing with polyester resin but remember it has no true strength. 90 feet is WAY more than you will use in this lifetime
- biaxial cloth /1708 (biaxial with csm backing)
- chopped fibre? (I used 1/4ā chop)
Dont worry about the wax you will likely not need it.
I would order what you figure you need to get started, that will give you a better gauge of how quickly you will go through it. I would start with a 20 liter / 5 gallon pail , should get you well into it.
3/4ā exterior grade Douglas Fir, plywood is the way almost everyone is going, stronger than dimensional lumber and simple to work with
not it sure what you mean by ā735ā ??
Assuming itās polyester, unwaxed, laminating resin because thatās what you need.
if itās an EEEPOXY. then you need to throw your list out and start all over
How do you plan to gut and prepare the transom for the seacast pour?
3/4ā exterior grade Douglas Fir, plywood is the way almost everyone is going, stronger than dimensional lumber and simple to work with
Sounds like a good starting order
you did remember MEK hardener?
Only other thing I would advise would be chopped finer to give your P.B. Some strength.
if you do need to make a joint in your wood (whatever you end up using) you can do a sandwich joint that doesnāt extend down to hull depth. It will be plenty strong.