I've been sitting on the sidelines during this one, but here are my thoughts on sandwich construction.
The wood really shines as the "meat" of the sandwich. In composite construction the stifness of the panels goes up exponentially as the distance between the layers of fiberglass increase. This is demonstrated far better in surfboards than in wooden boats. The "meat is a very lightweight foam that is quite flexible until it is sheated in glass and resin
The plastic resin is very hard when fully cured, but it needs the tensile strength of the fiberglass cloth in order to provide maximum protection to the underlying substrate. So if we just coated a surfboard blank with resin, it would be waterprrof and rigid, but it would break very easily.
It appears the problem on the laker which got this thread started was a tension failure. This was because as the plywood bent, the stress exceeded the tensile strength of the glass coth. I honestly believe that if the laker had a heavier cloth on the INSIDE this would not have happened.
With that being said, it is entirely possible that under the same conditions with a more rigid hull (from heavier glass inside) that the outer glass layer would have punctured...
I believe a more likely outcome would have been either a solid grounding without damage or a spill into fast water.
If you want really good abrasion resistance on the outside, standard (e-glass) cloth isn't the best choice. Dynel, Xynole, or Olefin fabric....even S-glass are more abrasion resistant.
I haven't coated a boat with the eopxy graphite mix that many of you are using, but it cetainly looks to do a good job.
If I'm building a boat that will be dragged or have a lot of grounding, I'll put on a layer of Dynel.
The toughest choices for us as builders is deciding which characteristics are most important? Do we worry more about durability, ultimate strength, total weight or total cost?
Personally I like a pretty boat that is light enough that I don't mind loading and unloading. I sacrifice a little durability and strength to keep the weight down.
Besides, if I break it, then I have an excuse to build another one.
disclaimer: :roll:
These are my opinions, your mileage may vary, .....