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<TITLE> AYRS Newsletter July 1997 July 97 Newsletter text </TITLE>
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<IMG SRC="Aqwvblt.gif" ALT="Icon" BORDER=0 WIDTH=9 HEIGHT=9><B><FONT FACE="Arial" COLOR="#333333" SIZE=5>Quick Hull-building</FONT></B><IMG SRC="Aqwvblt.gif" ALT="Icon" BORDER=0 WIDTH=9 HEIGHT=9></H1>
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<P><B><I><FONT FACE="Arial" SIZE="+1">From: Dave Culp <A HREF="MAILTO:<[email protected]>">&lt;[email protected]&gt;</A></FONT></I></B></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">I have been asked about a quick easy way to produce one-off foam sandwich hulls I used to build one of my boats. It's just a simple foam strip plank set-up, using CAD-generated mould sections. The trick is that a) the hull half-sections are small enough that the moulds can each be got out of a half-sheet (or less) of plywood (so you're just cutting holes in square pieces of 1/8&quot; doorskin ply), and b) with CAD, it's no big deal to build a mould every 6-8&quot;, so you don't need stringers.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">It is then put together on a large jig. In my case, 2 x 2's were screwed to my workbench, and to saw-horses set beyond each end. The foam strips (3/8&quot; x 1.5&quot;, for a 20' hull), are laid in, and just hot-glued to the moulds. Very little tapering is done; what's necessary is done by edge-bending the foam, on the bench, and cutting with a straightedge and knife. (Very elegant tapers result, and it takes only seconds to do).</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">Once the foam is in, the inside is glassed (and left very rough--no finish resin yet, and no sanding). The half-hull is braced (half a dozen sticks, again hot-glued across the hull), and popped/cut out of the moulds. The whole mould/jig is disassembled and re-assembled, front-for-back, resulting in a &quot;mirror&quot; image in three dimensions, and the whole thing is repeated to get the other half-hull.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1"> Both halves are carefully trimmed to centreline marks, and the hull glued together (not hot glue this time, but resin). We used scrap foam &quot;tabs,&quot; glued alternately on the inside of the hull-halves to assure alignment. When the resin set, the tabs were removed and the inside joint taped with 2&quot; glass tape. The stern got a foam transom later, and the bow a solid block of foam, carved to get the shape. </FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">I now had a &quot;solid&quot; hull, glassed/taped together inside, and raw foam on the outside. I cut a bunch of moulds down to make a cradle, and began fairing the foam until I liked it - Surform and a long sanding block. (I'd eliminate the Surform next time, and just use a long block with 36-grit paper). I filled the gaps in the foam with microballoons (less than two quarts, on a 20' hull, and 3/4 of that ended up on the floor as sawdust), faired again, and glassed it.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">Lastly, I finished off the cockpit rim, put in the seat-back/bulkhead, and a hatch for the beer. The hull weighed 40lbs, before we added mounting pads and hardware.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">I did all the above, completely alone in a single weekend - about 18 hours total, from gluing the plotted paper stations to doorskin ply with rubber cement (much faster than transferring the lines) to final sanding. The only power tools I used were a table saw to rip the foam strips, and a sabre saw to cut the doorskins. I did all the sanding by hand. Newly cured glass is as soft as pencil eraser, if you get it at just the right time. As I had laid up the boat with small batches of resin, I could follow this cure state around behind myself. This trick I learned from Jim Brown on Searunner tris.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">Mind you, I have built a hull or two, but never before with either the CAD stations, nor of foam strips. I have hand-carved hulls from solid foam, so am not afraid of shaping to eye, but I used no tricks beyond mixing the resin pretty hot, and moving fast. I expected a pretty rough finish, and would have allowed broad tolerances (speed boats are throw-aways, after all, and this hull was not meant to touch water at anything over 12-15 kts), but was astonished at the quality it produced.</FONT></P>

<P><FONT FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="+1">I give complete credit to this technique to Greg and Dan Ketterman. -- They used it to prototype all the TriFoilers, Avocets, and for LongShot herself.</FONT></P><P ALIGN=CENTER><A HREF="797-05.htm#TopOfPage" TARGET="_self"><IMG SRC="Aqwvppv.gif" ALT="Previous Page" BORDER=0 WIDTH=35 HEIGHT=32></A><A HREF="#TopOfPage"><IMG SRC="Aqwvtop.gif" ALT="Top Of Page" BORDER=0 WIDTH=35 HEIGHT=32></A><A HREF="797-07.htm#TopOfPage" TARGET="_self"><IMG SRC="Aqwvpnx.gif" ALT="Next Page" BORDER=0 WIDTH=35 HEIGHT=32></A></P>

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