by cracker39 » Mon Feb 20, 2006 7:33 pm
My comments on some of the above:
"One by" lumber is better quality when you buy wider and longer pieces. Making children's play furniture for craft shows, using spruce, I always bought 16' long 1 x 8s or 1 x 10s and got relatively knot-free wood without spending $$$ for clear grade. Long, wide pieces are cut from taller, straighter trees.
When a roof is curved, the plywood has very little tendency to sag. That would mean that it would have a compound curve (from two directions), and plywood inherently resists compound curves. Just try bending it one way, then the other, at the same time...very difficult to do. I used 1x2 spruce framing in a 12' boat with 1/4" luan skin and had no problems with flexing. I am using spruce 2x6s, from which I am ripping my spars. "Corner" spars where front meets top, top meets back, etc. will be two 1 1/2" x 2" ripped at angles and glued together to form a single corner spar. Other front/back/roof spars are 1" x 1 1/2" for a 1 1/2" thick front, rear, and top. Sides are 3/4" framing, in 2" and 3" widths, ripped from Spruce 1x10s.
JMHO.