I got the rudder shortly after posting the picks and she had the maiden voyage today. It is fast. I need to put ride plates on it to help with the stability. I will post a video soon.
Hey, just stumbled on this - just what I was looking for! This summer I am going to attempt a very similar project. Is the best approach for building the plug using a wood over frame construction or would you use another method if you were to do it again? I.e. solid wood or even foam with a coating on it? Any vids?
I believe wood over frame construction is best.Be sure to use gel coat to coat the plug and then sand and buff to the finish you desire. The more time you spend on the positive(plug) the better your negative (mold) will be , and will require less finishing in small tight corners. I used paint and the resin attacked the paint on my first attempt.
Greg,
I originally intended to make some to sell but after all the troubles I had with mold release I gave up on that idea. The original deck mold got trashed when a part stuck and I haven't made another one yet. I haven't run this boat in a while. I made a new strut and rudder and it doesn't handle the way I would like, so it has been on the shelf since I built my little rigger. I may build a new rudder and take it out for a video shoot.
Thanks for the tip, I wouldn't have known that! Is it a special type of gell coat? as i know that it is quite thick usually and would be quite difficult to get a nice finish with. How did you go about joining the two halves of the hull? Do you know of a good way to eliminate the lip you end up with?
You can get special sanding gelcoat,this is ideal for plugs because it sands easier than normal gelcoat.If you wish to make seamless hulls then you need two perfectly matched moulds that you then bolt together with the two parts in.You use a resin bog mix to glue the two haves together.When set take apart the two moulds and you should have a joined hull that will just need the seam wet sanding after removing most of the exess resin that squeezed out after joining,it should just snap away.You should then glass the seam inside where you can using glass tape.Sounds easy but if it were everyone would be doing it hehe,that said a lip or a shoebox join is actually stronger as theres more gluing surface.
Mart
Martin,
Sanding gel coat will not produce as nice a finish as using regular gel coat due to the filler in the sanding gel coat and regular gel coat is not difficult to sand. If you use regular gel coat and sand and buff it to a perfect finish it will make your mold much nicer. it is almost impossible to get into the inside corners of a mold this small and buff them. Your method of making a seamless hull is spot on, however...this hull is only 2" deep at the vee and 3/4" at the freeboard and 4-3/4" wide. getting inside to glass the seam would be extremely difficult. I am sure that someone with more patience than me could do it. I have built several 39" hulls and followed the same procedure you mentioned and they turned out great. What I found was that a boat actually needs some sort of spray rail.
You are right sanding gelcoat wont give as smooth a finish as normal gelcoat it will need painting,but i dont agree that normal gelcoat is easy to sand far from it.Actually rather than use gelcoat your best using Duratec but its so expensive.
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