scoggins said:I am thinking about making a pi rogue and putting bed liner on it rather than fiberglassing it
Has an one done this before and will it work?
On the canoe, they had it both inside and outside. A textured non-slip surface isn't what I would want on the outside, but let us know how it works if you use it.Kayak Jack said:In the pictures, it looked to me as though they had the liner inside the boat, not outside?
Jimmy W said:The primer is $58 a gallon plus at least $100 probably for the bed-liner stuff and UV coating.
As far as strength, it'll be the same as or stronger than fibreglass.scoggins said:I am thinking about making a pi rogue and putting bed liner on it rather than fiberglassing it
Has an one done this before and will it work?
WDfrmTN said:As far as strength, it'll be the same as or stronger than fibreglass.scoggins said:I am thinking about making a pi rogue and putting bed liner on it rather than fiberglassing it
Has an one done this before and will it work?
And, with some of the DIY kits the grit is separate, so you could probably leave that out for the exterior.
Personally, I'd go interior only.
I'm with Bellybuster. I would like to know how you think that it will be as strong as fiberglass. As an experiment, paint some of that bed-liner on a piece of newspaper. On another piece of newspaper lay on fiberglass cloth and saturate it with epoxy. Let both cure then see which one you can push your finger through. My money would be on the fiberglass being stronger.WDfrmTN said:As far as strength, it'll be the same as or stronger than fibreglass.
Rhino liner will hold a block wall intact when an uncoated wall crumbles from equal amounts of explosives. Blow up a truck up with Rhino liner installed and the bed stays virtually intact. Google the videos. Military considered it for low level "armour".Bellybuster said:WDfrmTN said:As far as strength, it'll be the same as or stronger than fibreglass.scoggins said:I am thinking about making a pi rogue and putting bed liner on it rather than fiberglassing it
Has an one done this before and will it work?
And, with some of the DIY kits the grit is separate, so you could probably leave that out for the exterior.
Personally, I'd go interior only.
I'm trying to wrap around my noggin how this could possibly add any strength to the boat at all, structurally speaking.