| Re: bows - you love them or you hate them
[Re: TEAMVMG]
#92626 12/24/06 11:51 AM 12/24/06 11:51 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
|
Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I make it 3 F18s Jake; Inter 18 F18 Infusion I thought the Inter 18 was around before F18 (it had a carbon mast) and was grandfathered in in hindsight after F18 came about. - I don't think that counts.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: bows - you love them or you hate them
[Re: Jake]
#92627 12/24/06 12:11 PM 12/24/06 12:11 PM |
Joined: Nov 2005 Posts: 1,203 uk TEAMVMG
veteran
|
veteran
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 1,203 uk | Fair comment Jake, for a yank! The inter18 was only available in europe with a ali mast and F18 was up and running earlier over here. SO WE CAN BOTH BE RIGHT!
Happy Christmas
Paul
Paul
teamvmg.weebly.com
| | | Re: bows - you love them or you hate them
[Re: Jake]
#92628 01/02/07 01:19 PM 01/02/07 01:19 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 371 Michigan, USA sparky
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 371 Michigan, USA | I thought the Inter 18 was around before F18 (it had a carbon mast) and was grandfathered in in hindsight after F18 came about. - I don't think that counts. Pete Melvin and Gino Morelli designed the Inter 18 specifically for the Formula 18 Class Rules and was sold with the aluminum mast in Europe. The carbon mast was an "extra cost" option sold exclusively (I think) in North America. Nacra also offered a larger mainsail for the carbon mast Inter 18 in the 2nd or 3rd year. All of the Inter 18s can be fully legal F18s if you use the aluminum rig and F18 sails.
Les Gallagher
| | | Re: extending your hulls
[Re: rsubishop]
#92631 01/02/07 09:52 PM 01/02/07 09:52 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 305 toronto, canada basket.case
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 305 toronto, canada | Dirk, use the blue foam you're talking about. its cheap and VERY rigid. It is every bit as rigid as the poly cores. to shape use adhesive backed 36 grit abrasive on a flat "stick" as a file. then sand with 80 grit before glassing. you will HAVE to use epoxy. everyone is right in saying that polyesters and vinylesters will melt the blue foam. I recommend Gougeon bros Pro set. stay away from the west systems. west is made for coating with light amine blush, but is not structural in anyway. in temps above 80 degs it will become soft and heat deflect. I learned this the hard way with bicycle frames. we shaped blue foam cores and wrapped carbon with west systems. I always thought it was my imagination that the bike was more flexible in hot weather until i made some flat carbon landing gear for my rc plane and watched the wheels turn outward 45 degrees in mid 80's weather. Anyway, shape away and have fun, would love to see pics of your progress it is not the west that fails at 80, it is the foam. i just finished the molds and boat for an open 60 mono project. we used the west 105 to sheath the molds and it was fine. we also used some of the blue foam (sm) in some of the ovens and it turned into a big blue puddle. oh, and the gougeons make west. | | | Re: extending your hulls
[Re: basket.case]
#92632 01/02/07 10:09 PM 01/02/07 10:09 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
|
Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I agree with basket case. The blue foam is simply not a structural foam. It is designed specifically for cost effective insulating properties and it is substantially weaker in shear than the foams that are designed to be used in laminate cores. In a properly designed laminate, the core should largely resist shear loading. Use end grain balsa or the foams designed for composite core applications if you want to achieve reliable results. You will also find that you will get a much better bond to the foam (and a significantly better structure) with pressure applied to the laminate during cure (autoclave or vacuum).
I've had no heat issues with the West System epoxies...although almost all epoxies will get soft if you heat them to high temperatures. Also note that epoxies are affected by UV so if you are leaving them bare and exposed to the sun without a UV barrier, they will yellow and can get brittle.
If you really insist on cutting corners, you'll have better results using green rigid PVC foam from a floral shop than the blue stuff from a home improvement center.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: extending your hulls
[Re: Jake]
#92633 01/03/07 10:15 AM 01/03/07 10:15 AM |
Joined: Nov 2006 Posts: 12 rsubishop
stranger
|
stranger
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 12 | correct, blue foam is not a designed structual foam as compared to say klegecell or any of the others, but its cheap and available in thickness and easily shaped and is typically lighter. we made a 3.1 lb carbon bike frame with it and got carbon bike of the year in '91 from bicycling mag. call gougoeon they will be happy to tell you west is not for structual laminates but for coating and recommend their pro-set series as they did our buisness here. we still use the west for coating thermoform tools if our customers wont swing for an aluminum tool, but for structural lams the pro-set has a fairly impressive set of physicals. Jake, how would an autoclave help you apply pressure to the surface of your laminate against your foam? the vacuum bagging works well, but room temp resins dont require an overall higher atmosphere to go through their cure cycle typically which is what the autoclave is there for. I dont see how the author here is going to keep a normal atmosphere behind his foam to allow an autoclave to work as your recommending, but again, bagging is a great suggestion to him. and i'm sorry but i disagree that the floral pvc would be better. the cells are too easily crushed. it is possible to make a ligther lam with the blue foam, its a tighter cell and holds less resin. it is not as structural, but it sounds like our author is not looking for overal structure, but simply changing shape, and the way he would be encapsulating the foam, I feel the blue would be strong enough. I definitly would not use it for a structural item where I was relying on the core as in a flatter 2-d laminate such as the skin of the hull. i used klegecell in my carbon daggers. | | | Re: extending your hulls
[Re: rsubishop]
#92636 01/04/07 11:38 PM 01/04/07 11:38 PM |
Joined: Jul 2005 Posts: 185 Shanghai, China Dirk OP
member
|
OP
member
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 185 Shanghai, China | thank you rubi, jake and the other authors again for the detailed informations and and very helpful hints.
rubi, I totaly agree that the only forces I expect the extended bows have to deal with are those from the waves.
while those can be significant, I also believe that the blue foam would be stiff enough if coated well on the outside.
how thick would you suggest to make the skin if using glassfibres? would 2 layers of 160 g /m² do the job?
I will try to use the vacuum principle to get a good connection between the glass and the foam.
anyhow, will surely keep track with a camera once action starts and will report progress than. :-)
Dirk
A-Cat GER 5
F-16 CHN 1 (sold)
SC 6.5 CHN 808
| | | SC20 loose forestay tangs?
[Re: rsubishop]
#92639 01/08/07 03:53 AM 01/08/07 03:53 AM |
Joined: Jul 2005 Posts: 185 Shanghai, China Dirk OP
member
|
OP
member
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 185 Shanghai, China | I noticed some horizontal possible movement in my forestay tangs. When taking of the cover plate, I can move them about half a centimeter fore and aft. In contrast, there is no noticeable movement in the direction the forestay pulls so. Talked to Aquarius Sails earlier and they recommended to completely replace the bulkhead with a new version for it. Since than I watched what was happening to my tangs carefully and noticed that after re-mounting the cover plates again with some epoxy no more movement occured. My guess is that the discovered aft and forward movement was probably caused by the boats earlier use on a beach where people probably pulled on the forestay when pulling the boat along the beach from and to the water. While not doing something like that anymore I wonder if I still can find out more about the construction principle of the tangs as I remember to have read somewhere else that old SC indeed might have encountered some issues with the forestay tangs being pulled out. Myth or fact? Any comments/experiences on this?
Dirk
A-Cat GER 5
F-16 CHN 1 (sold)
SC 6.5 CHN 808
| | | Re: SC20 loose forestay tangs?
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#92641 01/08/07 05:35 AM 01/08/07 05:35 AM |
Joined: Jul 2005 Posts: 185 Shanghai, China Dirk OP
member
|
OP
member
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 185 Shanghai, China | Ups! Thanks! That sounds scary! Anyone knows how the tang is fixed to the bulkhead on a 1980s SC20?
Rolf, will post on F16 regarding other topic.
Dirk
A-Cat GER 5
F-16 CHN 1 (sold)
SC 6.5 CHN 808
| | |
|
0 registered members (),
74
guests, and 94
spiders. | Key: Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod | | Forums26 Topics22,405 Posts267,058 Members8,150 | Most Online2,167 Dec 19th, 2022 | | |