Splining for big hulls

Discussion in 'Projects & Proposals' started by watchkeeper, May 13, 2008.

  1. watchkeeper

    watchkeeper Previous Member

    Hi Guys

    Anyone had experience with splining carvel planked hulls on bigger yachts (82ft) as preping for glass sheathing.

    We got a local yard that does good quality work on 30ft hulls but I'm not sure about the bigger yacht.

    80ft hulls planks are average 150mm x 60mm oak with 70m coach bolts into 200m sq sawn frames, full length keel, below shape has fine entry and beamy stern.

    My concern as I told the client a big hull will move in varying sea states possibly delaminating or springing a spline.

    Any thoughts would be welcome
     
  2. balsaboatmodels
    Joined: Jan 2007
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    Location: Boonville, MO, pop.8700; & 415 buildings on Nation

    balsaboatmodels Junior Member

    Hey there;

    I'm no expert but generally recall reading somewhere in Wooden Boat magazine and probably as well in The New Cold Molded Boat Building by Reuel B. Parker that glassing a hull that size and type is a really bad idea on account of exactly that delamination as its hull flexes and the wood swells and shrinks from variable moisture content - that adds up to a lot of motion over the life of the boat.

    Obviously my experience is with rather smaller boats than that, so do research well beyond this post. :)
     
    Last edited: May 13, 2008
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