tk wrote:Hi all,
I saw someone, somewhere here who had done a strip-built tear. I've done a canoe so am familiar with that technique. How did you apply strip-building to a tear-drop? Did you lay up panels and then attach to walls or did you lay up directly on the wall? Did you glass outside? Inside? Both? Neither? If you glassed what weight glass? Fabric or mat? Can I think of any more questions? Not at the moment.
Thanks,
Tom
That's my T/D in Gage's post. I employed two methods in the stripping process. First, I laid the strips on the roof underlayment, one-by-one..clamping each 'til the glue set.
Then, I came up with the idea of building smaller "panels" of 6-8 strips, then gluing the panels to the underlayment.
Those blocks of wood in the last pic are to keep the panel from buckling under clamping pressure. Waxed paper, I like Cutrite!, keeps glue from sticking!
Everything got a 4-oz glass covering, and 3-4 fill coats of epoxy, just like a strip-built boat!
If you have built a strip boat, consider building the side up on a flat jig on a bench. You could even glue them directly to the wall framing, assuming the use of insulation. Clamping would be easy as screwing a board to the bench with the strip under it. Once you get the wall done, 'glass it on the outside as you would on a boat. If you place the panel over insulation, you wouldn't need to 'glass the back side, as the glue/insulation would be plenty strong.
Someday, I'll do a 100% strip T/D, and that's how I'll do it!
