chicknwing
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2008
- Messages
- 411
The title of the thread says it all! What are your suggestions? Original stringers were ply, previous replacement was with dimensional. Pro and cons to each?
TC
TC
Dimensional lumber really doesn't have any place on a Boat.....
food for thought, when they build structural engineered wood beams, what do they use for the core strength. plywood, with a 2x4 on top and bottom.
You can't say plywood is stronger than dimensional because they each have their place. Plywood's greatest strength is in shear which is why it is used for things like sheeting on walls and roofs of houses. Dimensional lumber is much stronger in compression or tension loads than a piece of same dimension plywood. This is exactly why those engineered house floor beams have dimensional lumber on top and bottom. They are using each for their greatest strength. The top cap in compression, the bottom cap in tension, and the web of the beam in shear.
As for the stringers on a typical small boat, either will work fine in my opinion. I'll be using plywood when I do mine after this boating season is over.
You're slicing froghairs. Ext and pt ply has no problems with delaminating... especially when glassed in for stringers. Pt has little delamination issues when set outside in on the ground for several yrs here in Florida. I have a few pieces of pt used under my trailer tires on raw hammock land that stayed over 10yrs without doing anything but warping. The only reason I moved them was so a house could be built on the property.