hospadar
01-23-2012, 02:50 PM
I'm getting geared up for my next boat build after the unfortunate demise of my ill-fated first boat (see here: http://www.boatdesign.net/forums/sailboats/hull-shape-simple-sailing-scow-37499-3.html#post490323).
I'm leaning towards using the PD Goose design (basically a 12-food long pd racer). It'll have full-length side air boxes for floatation, and as a cost-cutting measure, I'd like to avoid using pre-made deck plates on the air boxes (I'd probably need at least 4 for the airboxes to be useful for storage and easy to clean out, and at $10-$15 each the price adds up).
I'm imagining square/rectangular hatches made from plywood or acrylic (which can be easily glued with acetone), a lip attached to the inside of the lid to hold it in place laterally and some kind of weather stripping/gasket/silicone something or other to seal the hatch. It doesn't need to be super waterproof, just to keep the bulk of the water out during a capsize to the boat can be righted and bailed.
Has anyone done something like this before? How did you seal the hatches and what did you use to secure them in place? A strap on the outside seems obvious, I've also seen some kayak deck hatches that use a bungee strap hooked to the inside of the hatch.
I'm leaning towards using the PD Goose design (basically a 12-food long pd racer). It'll have full-length side air boxes for floatation, and as a cost-cutting measure, I'd like to avoid using pre-made deck plates on the air boxes (I'd probably need at least 4 for the airboxes to be useful for storage and easy to clean out, and at $10-$15 each the price adds up).
I'm imagining square/rectangular hatches made from plywood or acrylic (which can be easily glued with acetone), a lip attached to the inside of the lid to hold it in place laterally and some kind of weather stripping/gasket/silicone something or other to seal the hatch. It doesn't need to be super waterproof, just to keep the bulk of the water out during a capsize to the boat can be righted and bailed.
Has anyone done something like this before? How did you seal the hatches and what did you use to secure them in place? A strap on the outside seems obvious, I've also seen some kayak deck hatches that use a bungee strap hooked to the inside of the hatch.