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Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Fiberglass





I used to work for a yacht builder, 29' to 41' cabin cruisers.  They used
plywood stringers and cross pieces inside the laid up hull (which was in a
mold).  They fiberglassed over the plywood and the result was very strong, for
that application. As for the pressures at 300 meters I think starting with wood
might not be the best, but if you start with fiberglass or something else
fiberglass would bond to, to frame it out, fiberglass layers could be added for
strength and to attach the frame to the hull.

Dan




"Marsee Skidmore" <heyred@email.msn.com> on 01/15/2000 12:19:45 PM

Please respond to personal_submersibles@psubs.org

To:   "Psubs" <Personal_Submersibles@psubs.org>
cc:    (bcc: Dan J. Rice/EST/Sherwin-Williams)

Subject:  [PSUBS-MAILIST] Fiberglass



Gentlemen,

I've recently been pondering my fiberglass exoskeleton. Since I'm diving to 300
meters, I don't want to use wood for substructure. Can I glass over aluminum?
Would fiberglass structural sections (tubes, I-beams) work? How would you build
a 30 foot fiberglass cabin cruiser hull without wood?

Thanks,

Joe
Gentlemen,
 
I've recently been pondering my fiberglass exoskeleton. Since I'm diving to 300 meters, I don't want to use wood for substructure. Can I glass over aluminum? Would fiberglass structural sections (tubes, I-beams) work? How would you build a 30 foot fiberglass cabin cruiser hull without wood?
 
Thanks,
 
Joe