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TonyHovis
02-05-2005, 03:10 PM
Greetings from Belize.

I am a furniture builder for nearly twenty years.

A year ago I had the pleasure of watching Mr. Ted Moores build a couple of mahogany strip race canoes.

To make a long story short, my dreams of building a canoe, have erupted into building a much larger vessel.

All of my research seems to steer amatuers to ply and glass?

I am most definately an amatuer boat builder, though I dont feel like this will be my last one. Too early to tell. Suppose it is. Will i be happier long term with a more complex building method?

I am really excited about this, as is my lady. Any pearl of wisdom would be most appreciated.

Oh yes, the boat I want to build will be a 26-28' sail boat for weekends in the carib.

Thanks,
Tony

Ssor
02-05-2005, 04:43 PM
http://media5.hypernet.com/cgi-bin/UBB/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=forum&f=2&submit=Go

Tony, the link is for the wooden boat forum. You will find a lot of help there and here. Start buying books on the subject and try to find a neighbor with experience to help guide you. Others on this forum and on the wooden boat forum will be better able to recommend the best books among the hundreds that are out there.

Skippy
02-05-2005, 04:43 PM
I haven't read it, but I've seen a reference to one book on materials:

Bruce Roberts-Goodson, Boatbuilding: Steel*Glass*Wood*Aluminum

"If you're deciding which material to use."

nero
02-22-2005, 03:31 AM
Buy a gallon of epoxy and silica powder, samples of glass fabrics, rip some of your pine scrap into strips of different sizes. Then have some fun building a model. You will learn a lot about what you will be doing when building a hull.

If you are a crafstman of 20 years, making a boat hull will be easy work ... only alot more of it. smile

Jim Herbert
03-01-2005, 06:32 PM
First I would decide if you would be happier with a chined boat (plywood) or a round bottom (other methods). If you like round bottoms and your friends strip canoes, you might investigate cold molding with veneer and epoxy and glass.

Jim Herbert

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