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Old March 23rd 05, 01:16 PM
Peter Dohm
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"Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired" wrote in message
news:%Ub0e.5735$%d7.4545@lakeread03...
COLIN LAMB wrote:

I built my own kayak and canoe and went through the same questions.

Because
you often need to carry the kayak and canoe, weight is a big factor.

I got most of my answers at Tap Plastics. Any local plastics outlet

will
have the various cloths that would be used, together with books and

clerks
who know the various materials.

RVs seems to be popping up everywhere, and that tends to diminish the

need
to learn about various materials. So, you may run into a campaign for

you
to build an RV if you visit an EAA chapter.

So, visit the kayak websites and any local kayak manufacturers. You

should
be able to find a chart of various materials used in constructing

kayaks,
and you can visit the websites to see the hype for that material (do not
necessarily believe all of it. Kayaks going through white water need to

be
tough.

73, K7FM


I would think it's a different kind of toughness what with bouncing off
of boulders and all.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


I suspect the same; and would expect Kevlar to be a material of choice
despite, or possibly because of, its tendency to extrude out of the
encapsulating resin. That may be part of its toughness.

This information is now twenty years out of date, but a formaer offshore
boat racer once told me that a Kevlar hull was about ready for the dumpster
at the end of a season. Apparently, repeated loading separates the fiber
from
the resin.

Peter