| Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: taipanfc]
#199549 12/27/09 05:48 AM 12/27/09 05:48 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | Can't help with your questions, but for chainplate location, what have you referenced this against? If taken from the Taipan, then this can be moved further aft.
This is what I have done on my homebuild Taipan F16. I've repositioned the side stay 200 mm further aft and I have never experienced any negative effects. Even when sailing without a spinnaker the boom never seems to go out far enough to touch it. The sail may however, up top, but you'll sail with some very large amount of twist when that happens. My sailing style doesn't seem to include this profile and it almost never happens with me. Note, that I do sail a numbers of times without the spinnaker, when I just want to sail around for an hour or so and not do all the rigging work. Just throwing up the mainsail and go like an A-cat works well for the short sailing trips. Main point of this post is however that in my opinion TaipanFC has a good point. You can place the sidestays further back without any penalty. The benefits in lower stresses and a more tight forestay are significant though. Going from 500 mm to 700 mm is a large modification. Best of luck building your boat ! Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: taipanfc]
#199555 12/27/09 07:26 AM 12/27/09 07:26 AM |
Joined: Jul 2002 Posts: 539 taipanfc
addict
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addict
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 539 | | | | Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: pilgrim]
#199588 12/28/09 10:16 AM 12/28/09 10:16 AM |
Joined: Sep 2009 Posts: 50 pilgrim OP
journeyman
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OP
journeyman
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 50 | Applied the carbon fibre cloth yesterday. one piece of 200g/ sq m 2x2 carbon twill weave. Used too much epoxy because I didnt vacuum bag. Its just too big for one person to layup well... there are some bubbles which I have to fix. [img:center] http://pics.livejournal.com/goodworks/pic/0000ayhh/[/img] | | | Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: pgp]
#199598 12/28/09 12:44 PM 12/28/09 12:44 PM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK Jalani
veteran
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veteran
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK | I guess people are busy with family, christmas etc. Really impressed with what you've done in such a short space of time though Shane. Amazing! I look forward to seeing pics of the finished hulls (as, I'm sure, do you!! )
John Alani ___________ Stealth F16s GBR527 and GBR538 | | | Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: pilgrim]
#199682 12/30/09 05:56 AM 12/30/09 05:56 AM |
Joined: Sep 2005 Posts: 893 waynemarlow
old hand
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old hand
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 893 | Hi Wayne, I do have a band of carbon cloth 100mm wide the length of the bottom and I plan to cover the whole hull with lightweight glass cloth. I have to get rid of some bubbles first... will cut an X shaped incision with my Dremel cutoff disc, fill with epoxy and put them back with a carbon cloth patch over it. Next time I will do the cloth in parts instead of one big 5m x 1.5m piece for the whole hull - I was too ambitious for a solo effort.
I do like the way your rudders are out back so you have good leverage on the tiller arms. I've been thinking how to do that with carbon rods and I might do something similiar.
Shane Shane, using carbon as you intend can cause more problems than solve, a 100mm additional band without other layers transfering the load to the single layer, will cause such a hard edge between the layers that it will almost certainly crack the inner layer of the two. Always use carbon for stiffening and glass to transfer the loads + act as wear layer. Everyone seems to think Carbon is the great thing to use, it very often is the wrong material and should be used with caution. An all carbon boat will weigh marginally less ( probably only 3 -4 kilos to a well built glass boat ( and how many of us are not 3 -4 kilos over weight ), cost 3 times more than glass, most certainly will be far less duriable and twice as hard to repair when you ding it. | | | Re: Designing/Building an F16
[Re: waynemarlow]
#199684 12/30/09 06:38 AM 12/30/09 06:38 AM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway Rolf_Nilsen
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway | It is christmas time.. I think I am +5 kilos just from christmas with the family so I certainly dont worry about carbon From the picture it is hard to say what is bubbles, what is distortion in the cloth and what is bubbles. I really liked the plants and the bamboo in the pic though as we have about 100cm of snow the last week. Putting on the cloth in one piece is OK if you organize the work. Ie starting at the middle and working outwards to both sides with one batch of 100grams epoxy at the time. Kayak and canoe builders do it all the time. A slow hardener might be better if you find the epoxy kicking too fast. You are working fast, hope to get an on the water report soon. Wayne, any hope for a followup on how your snuffer works and more pics? | | |
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