flippin yer sides | SouthernPaddler.com

flippin yer sides

Kayak Jack

Well-Known Member
Aug 26, 2003
13,976
171
86
Okemos / East Lansing Michigan
Yes, I use a butt block or reinforcing panel. Same material as the parent material of the boat. Bevel all edges and have it about 1/8" shorter than the width of the panel. That way, the ends don't conflict with each other on the inside curve of a concave surface.

Glass goes right over them with no problem. I suppose that someone could even artfully smear in thickened epoxy at the edges to make an even smoother ramp.

All joints will have one of three characteristics:
1. Heavier than parent material alone.
2. Weaker than parent material alone.
3. Both # 1 & 2.

For a few ounces of weight, I have a joint stronger than parent material.

Many builders are successful at the glass reinforcement technique, and I have never heard of one failing. Many builders are successful with scarfed joints, and I have never heard of one failing. The operative word here is "successful". It is VERY easy to succeed with the technique I use. I need that ease.
 

Tiki37

Member
Apr 4, 2008
13
0
Honolulu, HI
flippen yer sides

You guys are scarin me with this kind a talk! I'm planning to butt joint my sides tomorrow. Guess Ill plan on a helper for sure! :cry:
 

TheOtherHank

Member
Jan 27, 2007
18
0
Pacifica, CA
What I did was to grab the plank a foot or so on either side of the splice and slowly flipped it over while making sure all the flexing occurred between my hands and the ends of the board and none between my hands. So the splice stayed straight (engineering speak: "Strain Relief").

This worked well for the 6 splices I've done (So you can see I'm a true expert on this forum :wink: ) . YMMV.

- Hank
 

Kayak Jack

Well-Known Member
Aug 26, 2003
13,976
171
86
Okemos / East Lansing Michigan
If you've done six of them successfully - you're a heck of a lot more expert than me. I still like clamping another piece of plywood to the joint. I still like, even better, using wood. It has never failed me either on the work bench or on the river. (Only one of those locations is really important.)
 

oldsparkey

Well-Known Member
Aug 25, 2003
10,479
123
Central , Florida
www.southernpaddler.com
TheOtherHank said:
What I did was to grab the plank a foot or so on either side of the splice and slowly flipped it over while making sure all the flexing occurred between my hands and the ends of the board and none between my hands. So the splice stayed straight (engineering speak: "Strain Relief").

This worked well for the 6 splices I've done (So you can see I'm a true expert on this forum :wink: ) . YMMV.

- Hank

After trying a scarf joint and having it break on me with the 1st boat , I did the butt joints and turned them exactly like you do. No breakage and there have been a few boats made ( 9 so far ) with the butt joints using a strip of fiberglass over the joint. :D

Chuck.
 

Tiki37

Member
Apr 4, 2008
13
0
Honolulu, HI
flippen yer sides

I glassed the first side of my butt joints on the sides last night. Flipped em this morning, all well. The plastic sheet on top created quite a batch of wrinkles, however. I think I'll have to sand the 'texture' before applying final glass. :lol:
 

dangermouse01

Well-Known Member
Sep 8, 2006
312
1
Palm Bay, FL (East coast)
Re: flippen yer sides

Tiki37 said:
The plastic sheet on top created quite a batch of wrinkles, however. I think I'll have to sand the 'texture' before applying final glass. :lol:

Tiki;
Three words for you "CARBIDE Paint Scraper". If you don't already have one, run right out and get you one (or two different ones). You can find them in the paint section of the hardware stores, not in the tool section.
I like the Warner brand, carried by ACE hardware, nice offset handle to get in the smaller spaces. I have the 803, with the 2" wide blade (reversible, so you get two blades) and the 808 with the 1" wide triangular blades (3 blades with this one). The 808 is on the left.
pACE2-961240reg.jpg
pACE2-961234reg.jpg

Cost about $15 here on the continent. But sure beats the heck out of sanding stuff like those wrinkles you have now, and the epoxy drips and epoxy runs you will have later. Wait till you use it between fill coats when you are doing the cloth, you can scrape a whole boat alot faster than you can sand. With less mess, that should be worth the $15 alone. It will even remove all the bugs that land on your wet epoxy (one the epoxy has hardened).

DM
mike
 

Tiki37

Member
Apr 4, 2008
13
0
Honolulu, HI
flippen yer sides

Thanks for the tool hint! I WILL run right out and pick one up. No such thing as too many tools and if this makes things go easier I'm all for it. :D