erikgreen
Captain
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2007
- Messages
- 3,105
This is a question most likely for experts or those who have done scratch building of solid glass (non cored) for boat work.
I'm going to mold some new side panels for my boat on a table, laying on a waxed mold surface. I'm doing this as an alternative to my original idea, which was cutting and gluing a plywood core to the boat then building it up by glassing around it, then fairing and painting (or gelcoat, but more likely paint).
What I'm trying to decide is whether to mold the panels flat and then bend them to the hull shape, or instead to go all the way and take the mold curve from the hull shape, hold it with appropriate backing structure, and then mold the whole panel with core there.
The mold method will save me a lot of fairing and trouble regardless, but I'm not sure which way to go because I'm not sure how easily I'll be able to bend the panels to the hull shape.
What I'd be doing is:
1) Mold panels flat on a waxed surface. Layup would be gelcoat or duratec primer, followed by a layer of mat, followed by two layers of DB1200, all in poly resin.
2) Mount the panels on the boat by epoxy gluing them at the right height, then trim the top to form the sheer.
3) Attach a thin plywood core with cabosil glue/epoxy, then glass over the outside joint with biax tape and cover the inside core with 2x layers of DB1200.
4. Attach the top edge, sheer clamp, and the rest of the structure.
This will work if the panels I make flex enough to form to the hull contour. I'm not sure how well that will work. Anyone with more experience have an idea?
My alternative would be to form thin MDF to the hull shape then hold that curve by attaching backing structure (boards). Then I could move the mold to a table and glass the whole panel with a core before attaching it to the boat.
For reference this is a standard deep-V Sea Ray hull, 22 feet long, and as mentioned I'm attaching to the top edge of the old lower hull (which is now minus the top cap).
Erik
I'm going to mold some new side panels for my boat on a table, laying on a waxed mold surface. I'm doing this as an alternative to my original idea, which was cutting and gluing a plywood core to the boat then building it up by glassing around it, then fairing and painting (or gelcoat, but more likely paint).
What I'm trying to decide is whether to mold the panels flat and then bend them to the hull shape, or instead to go all the way and take the mold curve from the hull shape, hold it with appropriate backing structure, and then mold the whole panel with core there.
The mold method will save me a lot of fairing and trouble regardless, but I'm not sure which way to go because I'm not sure how easily I'll be able to bend the panels to the hull shape.
What I'd be doing is:
1) Mold panels flat on a waxed surface. Layup would be gelcoat or duratec primer, followed by a layer of mat, followed by two layers of DB1200, all in poly resin.
2) Mount the panels on the boat by epoxy gluing them at the right height, then trim the top to form the sheer.
3) Attach a thin plywood core with cabosil glue/epoxy, then glass over the outside joint with biax tape and cover the inside core with 2x layers of DB1200.
4. Attach the top edge, sheer clamp, and the rest of the structure.
This will work if the panels I make flex enough to form to the hull contour. I'm not sure how well that will work. Anyone with more experience have an idea?
My alternative would be to form thin MDF to the hull shape then hold that curve by attaching backing structure (boards). Then I could move the mold to a table and glass the whole panel with a core before attaching it to the boat.
For reference this is a standard deep-V Sea Ray hull, 22 feet long, and as mentioned I'm attaching to the top edge of the old lower hull (which is now minus the top cap).
Erik