Bellybuster said:Don't under estimate the abilities of balsa, properly structured it can be incredibly strong. Balsa based RC aircraft go thru incredible forces and can last for years
Bellybuster said:making a DIY vacuum bagging system would triple the depth of saturation me thinks. There is a ton of info online about building vacuum bag systems with fridge compressors, mind you, that would mean doing flat panels like a pirogue
Kayak Jack said:It would seem, without tests to confirm, that epoxy would literally be soaked up by porous wood such as balsa. This would negate much of the weight savings of its light weight. Maybe, a light coat of something to limit saturation of epoxy? But, then, even the prevention coat would add weight.
The balsa core even though brittle would add strength because of its thickness.JEM said:Balsa is very brittle. I wouldn't trust it as a "core" of a composite sandwich if you expected that core to add strength to the overall hull.
" A sandwich structured composite is a special class of composite materials that is fabricated by attaching two thin but stiff skins to a lightweight but thick core. The core material is normally low strength material, but its higher thickness provides the sandwich composite with high bending stiffness with overall low density.
Open and closed cell structured foam, balsa wood and syntactic foam, and honeycomb are commonly used core materials. Glass or carbon fiber reinforced laminates are widely used as skin materials. Sheet metal is also used as skin materials in some cases. The 1940 de Havilland Mosquito was built with sandwich composites, the balsa-wood core had on both sides plywood as the skin."
Jimmy W said:The balsa core even though brittle would add strength because of its thickness.
Read it, Bob, but believe it at your own risk. To think that wood does not only contribute, but makes up a majority of hull strength is not clear thinking. Think "Old Ironsides", Bon Homme Richard", "Pinto", "Nina", etc.etc. A laminate of epoxifed fiber glass over, say, cardboard will never produce the strength of the same laminate over good plywood.Wannabe said:At this point I think I'll go back to the top of this section and reread 'The Wood is the Filling, Not The Boat.
Bob