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#1
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The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat.
I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. |
#2
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use a little bit of muscle or a lot of muscle or steam it first as
required |
#3
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On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 22:40:38 UTC, "terry"
wrote: use a little bit of muscle or a lot of muscle or steam it first as required You can also split the ends, say 50-100cm, from the ends to half or third width, where the bend'n'twist are the worst. -- steen - menzi.dk --- |
#4
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On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:30:09 +0100, "Marcel"
wrote: The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat. I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. that wood's not too thick, so it should bend well with a little muscle or steaming. I suggest using groups.google.com to search this group's archives for 'steam bending'. A gentleman whose name escapes me has an excellent webpage FAQ on steam bending, complete with pictures. -m |
#6
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On 4 Mar 2004 08:04:23 -0500, Gregg Germain
wrote: Max Camirand wrote: : On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:30:09 +0100, "Marcel" : wrote: :The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat. :I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. : that wood's not too thick, so it should bend well with a little muscle : or steaming. I suggest using groups.google.com to search this group's : archives for 'steam bending'. A gentleman whose name escapes me has an : excellent webpage FAQ on steam bending, complete with pictures. : -m Don't know if I'm that person but here's my web page on steambending: Steambending FAQ with photos: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/Steambend.htm Yep, that's you. -m |
#7
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On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:30:09 +0100, "Marcel"
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: What boat are you building and how are you building it? The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat. I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#8
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When bending 19mm marine ply for the cabin roof of 'Bluefin' I used 'G'
cramps with a large block of wood to spread the load at the gripping point. Roof beams were 3" x 2" mahogany, 8' long with a 3" rise in centre. ie a 3" beam cut from a 6" wide section to allow for the curve. Ply was fixed across 3 beams at its centre then cramped to shape and screwed down at 12" intervals while still under pressure. Fixed 3 sheets that way with no problems. Peter "Old Nick" wrote in message ... On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:30:09 +0100, "Marcel" vaguely proposed a theory ......and in reply I say!: What boat are you building and how are you building it? The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat. I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. ************************************************** ** sorry .........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#9
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"Marcel" ) writes:
The problem is how do you bend wood on a yet to built boat. I am using wood 7mm thick and 50mm wide. The way they bent the spoons in "The Matrix". If the wood won't bend you can split it into thinner pieces all or part way, make saw cuts on the inside of the bend, or you can try moistening and optionally heating the wood using steam, hot water, hot wet towels, etc. A steam box is often preferred because its fast, the wood can be made to bend more, and the wood does not get saturated with water so can be worked when it has cooled. Green (freshly cut) wood is moist and will bend with or without heat more easily. Old dry wood has to soak up moisture before it can be heated to bend. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
#10
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William R. Watt wrote:
Old dry wood has to soak up moisture before it can be heated to bend. Not in my experience. I've seen no difference in bending between dry stock and the same stock that's been soaked in water for days or even weeks. It's the heat that makes the wood bend-able, not the moisture. Steaming is simply a way of heating the wood rapidly to the correct temperature for bending, which - luckily for us - happens to be around the boiling point of water. |
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