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#1
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| Bamboo as mast and spars Anyone know of a source for bamboo to be used for spars and masts? Up to 18 ft and 3 inch diameter, ect. Thanks, Mark. |
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#2
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Hope this can lead to some help: http://canoesailingmagazine.com/inde...and-Spars.html
__________________ yes, it is a revolution ---"So (yet) another new world begins." Seahorse 2011 My Gallery: http://www.boatdesign.net/gallery/sh...0&ppuser=31218 |
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#3
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__________________ Hoyt "Lightning is very selective and will not strike crap." Wynand N "We Redistribute World's Wealth By Climate Policy" UN IPCC Official |
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#4
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-- CutOnce |
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#5
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| Bamboo would seem a terrible choice for spars on all but the smallest boats. Even on these you're paying huge weight penalty for the convenience of using bamboo. |
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#6
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During the build and rigging of my son's little boat, I had to purchase more bamboo than was needed (about 150% more) just to make up the minimum shipment ($35 I think?) required to deal with the vendor. Eric McNicholl, designer of my son's boat was building an excursion/challenge sail boat for a client at the time and he was interested in seeing what could be done with bamboo as a composite component material. Part of his interest was due to bamboo being a sustainable and cheap material - the other was the general satisfaction the bamboo delivered in the children's boat application. The client building the excursion/challenge sailboat (I think around 27', cat ketch rigged, open) was willing to try the bamboo composite mast and was so happy with it they built a second. The bamboo was ripped into fibres, assembled on a mandrill and then carbon epoxy wrapped (I could be wrong on details, so Eric should be contacted for accuracy). The resulting spars were light, incredibly strong and made both designer and client happy. They are well into their second season of heavy use with no problems as of my last contact. Although no material is perfect, it is kind of nice to find one that can regrow in a year or two. Given the pricing, bamboo as a raw material is dirt cheap. I'm not disputing PAR's position that raw, unprocessed bamboo would have many issues if scaled beyond a tiny, cheap and limited lifespan boat, but looking further than just using dried bamboo stalks was an interesting experience with a happy client in this case. I know Eric said they learned a lot about working with bamboo during the process, as it was completely new and foreign material. -- Bill |
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#7
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| Using bamboo as Bill describes it seems reasonable, though I think there are much more cost effective choices then cabrom and bamboo fibers. How about Spectra strands and carbon? An 18' by 3" diameter bamboo pole will be quite heavy and fragile. |
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#8
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Spectra strands certainly would have great strength in tension, but effectively nothing in compression. Would be lighter though, but nowhere as cheap. When Eric first said he was going to try this, I thought it was a Kyoto-inspired bong hit thought, but the resulting spar was amazing. -- CutOnce |
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#9
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| There's an ouftit on Lakewood NJ with great variety in bamboo species available; they may ship: http://www.bambooandrattan.com/ I agree that bamboo not terribly suitable for a mast. That said I love it for sprit and boom on my Opti rig and also for boom and yard on my ACA lateen rig. Use dowels glued into the ends prior to drilling for outhauls, yard/boom connections, and the like. You can also lash/whip bamboo along its circumference to keep from splitting or binding together where you have splitting. It's amazing stuff. I also split some out with a froe and, after working the staves with thickness planer and crooked knife, use the bamboo for transverse ribs in a skin over frame kayak. They are light and robust. An Umiak with bamboo ribs would be a neat project. |
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