Forming compound curves in heavy aluminum plate

Discussion in 'Metal Boat Building' started by BillyDoc, Dec 23, 2006.

  1. Lyle Creffield
    Joined: Jun 2006
    Posts: 35
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    Location: Sunshine Coast Australia Lat 27S

    Lyle Creffield Junior Member

    Many helpful persons

    Hi Billy doc

    i seconded your comments that there are many helpful persons who use boatdesign net

    research shows that a little help to understand something goes a long way in the learning process

    thank you to all those highly tolerent persons for their most imformative responses

    lyle
     
  2. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    you cant wheel to the edge of a plate, allow 60--75 mm in topsides first run you can use most of the plate as there is lil shape, but anywhere else alow that much see my gallery
    Eckold squeeze recipricating presses have ltd .use and are two man operation, you can form pretty much all using small v wheels, once gain see the nose in my gallery Up to 8mm with not excessive shape you can use urethane wheels leave sno marks but then the marks are all inside except on a clipper bow when the forming is other way
     
  3. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    and anyone who heats a plate is an amatuer, you NEVER heat alloy, ever. it is possibel to form a plate so close to the desgned shape that only light pressure is necessary to bring it home
     
  4. BillyDoc
    Joined: May 2005
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    Location: Pensacola, Florida

    BillyDoc Senior Member

    Lazyjack,

    Thanks for the info. I've pretty much settled on a bloody great wheel with a hydraulic drive so I can control it easily, and not use my own muscles for power. I know it seems crazy, but I have become convinced that half-inch plate is the way to go.

    Here are some reasons:

    Heavy aluminum plate is much less subject to heat distortion during assembly.

    Given that the density of aluminum is roughly 34% of steel, the equivalent steel plate to half-inch aluminum (by weight) would be 0.172 inches thick, which is not unreasonable for the hull of a steel boat of similar length. The aluminum is much stronger though.

    Butt welds have much more area, so are stronger (assuming a complete fill, which is easy enough if you first saw out the area right through to just short of the other side)

    I will be using frames every 18 inches, longitudinals every 12 inches, so individual plates will not be too large to handle.

    Expense aside, my very limited experience is that heavy plate is actually much easier to handle for a project like this than the light stuff. And besides, I want a real brute of a boat. The preliminary calculations for my half-inch thick hull give me a hull weight of 5,404 lbs, which doesn't seem too unreasonable for a 44 foot hull. I don't care about speed, I want seaworthiness above all other qualities.

    The downside of a heavy hull is certainly welding time and supplies and initial material cost, which in this case will add roughly $7,500 compared to quarter-inch plate. But I don't see any other downside at all! That is, assuming proper equipment to handle that plate starting out, which I intend to have.

    BillyDoc
     
  5. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    well wait and see, you are a stubborn bugger, If I was building a rocket I would listen to you,
    no one asked you to build in 6, 8 is ok, have you ANY idea how hard it will be to stretch that 13 plate ? you have to stretch before you even start to form, the stretch in the centre of the plate, makes it go AROUND LENGTHWISE, the forming makes it go around bodywise Do you still have the draft of my book?
    It should give the wheel speed in ft per minute Best is a planetary gear, driven by a fractional hp elec motor with a chain driving the wheel, pressure is applied through a screw Still what do i know I only personally built 32 alloy boats, If you think I,m getting cross you are right Stubborn bugger!!:))
     
  6. BillyDoc
    Joined: May 2005
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    Location: Pensacola, Florida

    BillyDoc Senior Member

    I hear you Lazyjack, and your words have made me very cautious about whether or not it is possible to form plate this thick! So, I'm going to build the wheel and try it before proceeding with the boat plans. That way I'll know for sure. I certainly prefer to go with the heavy stuff, but if it can't be done . . . then I guess it can't be done!

    And If I put together an oversized wheel and find I still can't work half-inch plate . . . I bet it will work the thinner stuff just fine!

    Thanks for the info! I really appreciate your experience and input.

    BillyDoc
     
  7. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    ok, normally on the top run would start anything from 4 foot wide pl at bow and finish maybe .9m or 36 in at transom
    second run narrower and and tapering maybe to 20 inches at transom
    because you a re doubled ended, your plates are going to get very narrow at stern, your trim waste will be 40% = of the pl width here, as you will need that extra width that you cant wheell
    You will make a pattern at every frame. for every plate you may have 10 by your side by the wheel as you work, the plate must fit that pattern exactly right out to the end of the pattern which will look like a slice of new moon
    its not so crucial in flatter areas BUT any boat with shape, needs wheeling no matter how small the curve, because if you force the plate, when you weld it, it collapses in that area, Of coarse there is an alternative, BOG, thick red microballons,
    you see that default hull in delft? well look at the grey lines in the body and that is something like your plate scheme would be Except the line would drop at the bow , in other words the top run at bow is the widest plate nearer the time I will draw your plate plan for you
     
  8. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    oh I did not say it was impossible , I said becuz your yacht is short and with much compound, it would be very very difficult If you look at that keel in my gallery(which I did not build) you will see anything is possible with skill, they built a very complex press for this, and the plate was THICK
     
  9. BillyDoc
    Joined: May 2005
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    Location: Pensacola, Florida

    BillyDoc Senior Member

    Lazeyjack, The nose of the Millennium 55 in your gallery . . . how thick is that? Looks like it was a pure ***** to do!
     
  10. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    no it was fun, took 5 hrs, we layed the machine down, I built littel former wheel, and a girlfriend worked the fwd reverse switch, I had a pattern for every waterline
    was 6mm, and boy once its formed it as strong as a pipe, the the painters bogged all over it!!:((
     
  11. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    very slender up there and I welded permanent backing bars to the inside of the nose edge cos there was no room from inside to get to it. At the forefoot, 8mm, is so strong 5083 that once formed you can not move it with a 15 lb hammer, this is why I cant get to grips with the 13 pl idea
     
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  12. lazeyjack

    lazeyjack Guest

    fair sailing yacht

    this is the best (fairest yacht) I have ever seen, built in Holland , unpainted there is some sort of preservative sprayed on the plate, the owner tell me she is built over frames only In that case it is quite exceptional, all weld penetrations have been removed and , well it just impresses so much.
    the house is timber as is the deck, joined at the deck edge , timber is bolted to a shelf which runs around the sheer,
    i have built same principle but used alloy deck and joined the house to it , by screwing to the flange the boat is in Mooloolaba at mo, on world cruise
     

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  13. SkipperSki
    Joined: Sep 2007
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    Location: Olympic Peninsula, WA

    SkipperSki Junior Member

    You might want to check out, Grizzly Industrial, Inc. their catalog is free.
    www.grizzly.com

    Every Metal or Woodworking Shop, should have this catalog on the book shelf.
    If you go to the web site, enter in the following model #'s

    Casters; H0655
    English Wheel; G0496
    Planishing Hammer; G0497
    (while both these are for light gage (16 ga.) mild steel) and would be suited for lighter metal boat builder, but give you an idea of each form.

    I hope this is useful info !
     
  14. BillyDoc
    Joined: May 2005
    Posts: 420
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    Location: Pensacola, Florida

    BillyDoc Senior Member

    SkipperSki,

    Thanks for the link! I've got it bookmarked.

    BillyDoc
     

  15. Lyle Creffield
    Joined: Jun 2006
    Posts: 35
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    Location: Sunshine Coast Australia Lat 27S

    Lyle Creffield Junior Member

    Thick skined ... hull

    Hi BillyDoc

    12mm is thicker than most
    Firstly, i am not a naval architect
    But I am a strong believer in thick skinned ally for 12m plus sailing vessels
    One of the more capable Australia designers Graham Radford who trained under David Adams said to me when discussing his Radford 14 #47 that the first boat that was built had a 6mm hull - he described this as "very strong" considering the overall design
    For practical purposes i consider 8, 10, 12mm as thick in comparison to the excepted norm
    Advantages: Most can weld to and join such plate without distortion, corrosion will always be an issue but with thick plate it can be reliable repaired, and last a very long time

    Here i would like to clarify my design parameters if you will so allow

    Blue water-ocean going vessel, that will remain water tight providing there is keel to ground clearance, a hull that has the highest resale value by way of an almost indefinite lifetime (we only think we build for ourselves), and ease of construction - too many hulls never get completed primarily because of the excessive hours caused by construction design, fit out is a big job in itself

    I am guessing we are on similar paths save that i intend to mass produce after the my prototype is completed

    Can 12mm plate be bent (compound curvature i assume)to your design without such deformation as to cause lost of strength and possible corrosion problems (from external radius stretch) as to defeat the original aim of strength and resistance to corrosion?

    Life is about balance and so to is vessel design (most call it compromise)

    I believe that parking a 10mm hull on a reef would have similar consequences to doing so with a 12mm both would likely survive with some dents and scratches why do 12mm when 10mm may do?
    A similar argument could be raised for 8mm but not 6mm in my view

    I have long had an idea (and many sketches) of a large multi wheeled machine computer driven that can feed 6m by 2.4m plates back and forth to arrive a a desired compound curvature and once trimmed become part of a section of preformed hull - but have not located the entrepreneurial capital required

    So without such a machine 12mm plate and tight compound curvature will be very time consuming or ... consider single chine, frameless initial construction, then fit frames, upright construction, estimate hull construction less keel, rudder and skeg of less than 400hrs, arround 1000hrs is more often the norm - food for thought?

    I have built a 1.5m model of my CREF15, 15m LOA, 15t, 4.2m beam, hope to build a 3m 1/2 hull over Christmas before having the design checked by a naval architect and NC file produced


    good luck and best wishes
     
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