polyethilene

Discussion in 'Fiberglass and Composite Boat Building' started by zgubidani, Oct 28, 2009.

  1. pamarine
    Joined: Sep 2009
    Posts: 144
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    Location: Norfolk, VA

    pamarine Marine Electrician

    intresting. You have any links where I can read more about this?
     
  2. Steve W
    Joined: Jul 2004
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    Location: Duluth, Minnesota

    Steve W Senior Member

    pamarine,sorry it took so long getting back here,when we started building snowboards back in the early 90s there was no info available at all and no company in the world who could build a board that would last a season without falling apart,it took everyone years to reach the stage they are at now with no sharing of technology,very few are now manufactured in the USA.Im sorry i dont have any links as ive been out of the industry for a decade but when i look at them in the shops im struck by how they havnt changed at all since we ceased production except for more basic logo style graphics to reduce costs.I did a google search a few weeks ago and found a place that will show you how its done(for a cost of course)What i can tell you is that i learned a lot more about sticking difficult to bond materials together in that 7 year period than in my 35 years or so as a boatbuilder.
    Steve.
     
  3. Charles N
    Joined: Dec 2009
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    Location: Sydney

    Charles N New Member

    I have a 4.1m Polycraft boat and a sit on kayak, small scape's you just heat with a hair drier and they disappear, larger scratch you sand then heat.
    There are manufacturers in Australia, New Zealand, US and England,some of them produce some really weird boats, others such as the Triumph Boats look fairly conventional.
    A big thanks to Steve W for your info on gluing
    Regards Charles
     
  4. jonr
    Joined: Sep 2008
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    Location: Great Lakes

    jonr Senior Member

  5. pamarine
    Joined: Sep 2009
    Posts: 144
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    Location: Norfolk, VA

    pamarine Marine Electrician

    visit triumphboats.com and see comparision between their line and Boston Whaler.
     
  6. jonr
    Joined: Sep 2008
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    Location: Great Lakes

    jonr Senior Member

    Looks like the HDPE Triumph is the same weight as a similar Whaler or Zodiac RIB. Aluminum (such as a Lund) is lighter than any of them.

    I wonder which one would ultimately be most durable? If rocks were involved, I'd guess the HDPE boats.
     
  7. pamarine
    Joined: Sep 2009
    Posts: 144
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    Location: Norfolk, VA

    pamarine Marine Electrician

    look at the "Bubba Tests" on their site
     

  8. gelisli
    Joined: Mar 2006
    Posts: 1
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    Location: istanbul

    gelisli New Member

    we have built it in turkey but it s different.

    [​IMG]
     
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