Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Group Forum: Boat Builders and Repair :: Strip parallel to waterline or gunwales?
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Alan Gage |
My first strip always follows the shear. My second one is the one that runs straight. Actually it's not run straight; I let it rise a little towards the ends. This makes for more work when it comes time to fill in the gaps later but it also lets me set the shear height exactly where I designed it to be rather than trying to come up with a method to measure, mark, and cut it later. Following the shear line the whole time would be the easiest and least time consuming assuming it didn't cause any complications; which I doubt it will. My next build I'll try following the shear line again and see how I like it. Would sure be nice not to have to fit all those little pieces at the end. Alan |
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Alan Gage |
I built my first couple boats following the shear. Then I built a fitness solo with some extreme tumblehome and tried to do the same thing. The stress on the strips in the center was getting pretty severe so I ran a straight strip to relieve it and I've done it that way since. For most hulls I think you'd be fine either way. Just another one of those personal preference things. Alan |
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SoMpls |
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1JimD |
The fastest and to me, easiest is to start at the shearline, and follow it up. Once you have stripped to the football, strip past center on one side. Cut the centerline. Go to the other side and strip to the center. Basically it's the Canoe craft method, except I start by following the shearline. I agree either method works ! It's really the builders choice. There are others too. The Herringbone method has it's merits, but requires a lot of strip fitting. Jim |
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SoMpls |
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SoMpls |
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Cloznuff |
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