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  #16  
Old 12-24-2007, 01:36 PM
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Pericles Pericles is offline
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Fishing Net And Soccer Balls might work better, perhaps---Nah!

It was the night before Xmas Eve and Penguinman raised again the spectre of untimate madness, the use of PVC pipes to navigate the mighty waterways of the USA.

In the middle of November this year, a similar thread to which djwkd http://www.freewebs.com/raftbuilders/
also contributed, then tailed off without closure. http://boatdesign.net/forums/showthr...ighlight=djwkd

Flotation comes in many forms, see title above, but to set off without propulsion and at the vagaries of wind and tide is to become a certain top prizewinner in the Darwin Awards. http://www.darwinawards.com/

I'm with PAR and Jimbo1490 on this.

Pericles
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  #17  
Old 12-26-2007, 11:20 AM
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the1much the1much is offline
huh? hehe ;)
 
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if noone will tell others i gots a secret,,,i know this guy, that knows this dude, that has a dudett that knows a dudett,that knows a Japanese dudeett that knows a japanese dude that does that oragomie whatever stuff,,that paper folding ca-ca,,,,i have investors ready to invest in like 100 of them dudes to make us a cruise liner raft,our only set back is finding a big nuff piece of paper
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  #18  
Old 12-26-2007, 01:23 PM
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Fanie Fanie is offline
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Aberamonli, I have a suggestion to make. PVC pipes are not a good idea, and they won't last very long either. But what would work very well is to use one as a mold. I would however suggest you try and find a piece like a 12" (300mm) or larger diameter. You need only one piece. Saw it through the length but one cut only so you have a tube with a cut through, and it stays in one piece. Cover it with anything that fiberglass won't adhere to and glass the thing six or eight layers. To remove the pipe (which is now an insert) you fold the one cut side into the other so the circumference gets less and you can pull the pipe out. Sand a bit, then paint and if you've got two such pipes you can make a cat. Make the length as long as you can handle... the longer the better. Width can be 60% or more of the length. 5m should be about a minimum length in my opinion.
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  #19  
Old 12-26-2007, 01:55 PM
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TeddyDiver TeddyDiver is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fanie View Post
you can make a cat.
Fanie, that sound like Hobie
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  #20  
Old 12-26-2007, 07:58 PM
Jimbo1490 Jimbo1490 is offline
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Fanie,

I own a couple of large pieces of PVC pipe, one 8" and one 12"(about 210mm and 300mm) and I can tell you that your plan will not work as proposed since the pipe is simply way too thick to flex inward as you've described. The larger pipe is around 1.25" (~32mm) thick. If you cut it completely in half lengthwise then maybe you'd have a chance at de-molding. But with one slit; no way!
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  #21  
Old 12-27-2007, 12:28 AM
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PAR PAR is offline
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A much better way to make 'glass pipe is to use cardboard, spiral wrapped over something. A simple furring strip jig or other suitable arrangement can yield fine tubes, assuming the laminate schedule is sufficient for the eventual loading and displacement. The cardboard can be waxed, or better yet, left inside. Rhino coat the outside and you have a waterproof, seamless tube.
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  #22  
Old 12-27-2007, 03:55 AM
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Sounds like sturdy pipes you have there... take a crane to haul them. As Par suggested cover the pipe with two laers of plastic (so they can slide over one another) then cover with another layer ie cardboard / paper tape and glass over that... I have used a 5mm foam before to make the spacer between allu and the fiberglass that I have paper taped to make a fiberglass pipe from... it worked a treat. Just pulled the lot off the allu and pulled the tape and foam out.
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  #23  
Old 05-04-2008, 09:34 AM
deltafour deltafour is offline
 
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Here check this link out for PVC boat http://rebelcat.com/
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  #24  
Old 05-05-2008, 03:34 AM
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Pericles Pericles is offline
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deltafour,

Those are some fun catamarans you have created there. Growing up in NZ from 1949 to 1953 my younger brother and I would "rescue" floating driftwood logs such as those pieces you used for RebelCat 3 and be temporary passengers as they drifted along the coast. We'd sail for about half a mile and then scamper back to our parents. Lucky for us there weren't any hazards like the one you faced.

Elsewhere on this forum we had a thread that discussed the modus operandi of crimping very thick walled sewer pipes in the manner you illustrated. Placing the E-PVC discs as you described in another innovation to me. You have certainly got me thinking. about drainpipes again.

Regards,

Perry
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  #25  
Old 05-23-2008, 03:57 PM
zmatt zmatt is offline
 
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Those are some awesome catamarans, i think i might make something like that soon. This is my design which is alright for fishing or crusin around.

http://www.instructables.com/id/Buil...al-cost-and-t/
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  #26  
Old 05-23-2008, 09:12 PM
Steve W Steve W is offline
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I lived in Taiwan in 1996 -97 and saw quite a few workboats in Taichung harbor which were made out of pvc pipe ,i didnt get close enough to take dimensions but they looked to be 20+ft and made by joining lengths of 6"pipe turned up at the bow and lashed together raft style,they had a center console and a large outboard.obviously they didnt listen to the theorists and just did it.There were a few of them so it must have worked ok.
Steve.
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  #27  
Old 01-26-2009, 04:32 PM
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djwkd djwkd is offline
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As formentioned, the best way to make a raft would be to make a pontoon hull, fill it with bottles and foam, seal the pontoon hull, then make another.After this, make a deck between the two hulls.
It is probably the easiest and most accesible way to build a raft, or for that matter, any type of watercraft.
You would need about 2 sheets of plywood, and ask around from your neighbours for old bottles and polystyrene/polyuerethane foam.(sorry if polyue...thingy foam is spelt wrong lol.).

Its a shame more people dont build rafts this way.
Anyway, if you do plan to do it this way, check out
http://www.floatingneutrinos.com

Hope this helps, dominic.
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  #28  
Old 07-31-2009, 06:40 AM
Marjamada Marjamada is offline
 
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Building a Raft or Sailboat with PVC Pipe

I'm amazed that this discussion is still active. Thank you for mentioning my web site RebelCat.com in connection with making sailboats from PVC pipe. There is a Flotation Chart there which will help you calculate the diameter and length of pipe you need to float your maximum load, which is the total weight of your boat plus crew plus cargo. Flotation should be at least twice maximum load, so that your pontoons are half out of the water. The new site, which I just completed, includes my latest PVC-pipe catamaran, RebelCat 5. The FAQ may also help you design your own cat, as there are answers to questions I get every day on making cats from PVC pipe. There is also a new DVD which is a how-to video on making catamaran sailboats from PVC pipe. It details the entire construction, from buying your pipe to sailing your cat. There is a detailed chapter on heat-shaping pipe to form wedge-shaped, wave-piercing bows - a technique I invented while making RebelCat 4 in 2006. I have improved the technique for RebelCat 5. I wish you all success with your boats! -Martin Adams
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  #29  
Old 01-08-2012, 03:30 AM
markcrete markcrete is offline
 
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pipe raft

hdpe is strong, durable and can be welded. it is used for many applications in australian waters. pontoons, houseboats,pile coverings or filled with concrete to construct piles. some guys sailed across the atlantic on a hpde pipe raft. the second "cross" layer of pipes were used not only for the construction but to store water and gas for the journey. buy the way have you opened the doors of that shopping mall yet as i cant find anything for my wife at the local stores.
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  #30  
Old 01-08-2012, 06:26 AM
RayThackeray RayThackeray is offline
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Derek and Clive said that Winston Churchill's bogeys made excellent rafts.
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