ttownshaw wrote:
Welcome aboard! Lot's of questions in there. Where are you located? I think marine ply and epoxy is worth the investment but it is your boat.
Thanks. I'm from the San Antonio area. I understand what you mean about the marine-ply and epoxy, but I'm looking at all aspects, budget, time, R.O.I., etc. I haven't decide for sure yet. I know that I won't use poly resin on the hull exterior. I just don't think it is hard enough to give the right protection.
jprice wrote:
Welcome to the forum. That's quite a plan you've got!
As far as the PT lumber is concerned, the general recommendation is to stay away from it. It's usually too wet to use for anything besides a house deck, so you'd have to let it air dry for quite some time. At which point a lot of it will probably warp, twist, and cup.
Plus you really want some solid, stable, quarter-sawn lumber for the frames.
There's probably a bunch of other reasons too, but the bottom line is, if you finish the boat properly, then there shouldn't be a big issue with the wood getting wet, so you really don't need all those toxic "anti-decay" chemicals.
I think I will forego the PT for 2 reasons
1. While I can air-dry and then mill the wood afterwards to make it suitable, your point about quartersawn is a good one. I can't do anything to change that.
2. If I have the confidence to potentially use non marine ply and forego the white oak/mahogany because I can protect it (as you stated) there isn't really a need for it.
Can someone also make sure I understand the term filleting correctly. I understood it to be filling, smoothing, rounding, all of the interior corners- such as at the transom to side joint, battens to hull, floor to side etc.
Does anyone know what the designed top speed for the KonaKai, Monsoon, and Phantom are?
Does the cabin skiff have enough room to actually construct the cabin in a way to sleep 2 as a v-berth, or is it really just a good storage area with a protected cockpit?
Thanks gentlemen.