coosa board
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- Russ Pagels
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- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 18:17
- Location: NC
coosa board
Is coosa board a good product to use for rudder tables? I know I read something here about this product but can't find it on search. thanks Russ
- CaptPatrick
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Coosa will be fine if you heavily reinforce it.
This is the way I'd would do it:
2 pcs of 1/2" Coosa laminated together with 1208 biaxle fabric, (45/45 weave).
Laminate both exterior faces with 1208, lightly sand, round over the corners, and cover the whole thing with 1 1/2 oz chopped strand mat. Sand that to a smooth surface and add a coat of resin to fill in pin holes.
Ready to paint, gelcoat, or finish as I like. I'd do it all in polyester resin to that point...
This is the way I'd would do it:
2 pcs of 1/2" Coosa laminated together with 1208 biaxle fabric, (45/45 weave).
Laminate both exterior faces with 1208, lightly sand, round over the corners, and cover the whole thing with 1 1/2 oz chopped strand mat. Sand that to a smooth surface and add a coat of resin to fill in pin holes.
Ready to paint, gelcoat, or finish as I like. I'd do it all in polyester resin to that point...
- Russ Pagels
- Senior Member
- Posts: 513
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 18:17
- Location: NC
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
The bulkhead, yes. That's what I used on the current B31.
Structural supports, yeah maybe if you designed 'em right and glassed 'em up good. But what I used was 2" structural square fiberglass tubing, 1/8" wall thickness, for the vertical supports. The horizontal, (fore to aft), I constructed 1/2" plywood I beams, epoxy glassed over and capped with structural fiberglass channel.
The structural fiberglass was procured from McMaster-Carr
Structural supports, yeah maybe if you designed 'em right and glassed 'em up good. But what I used was 2" structural square fiberglass tubing, 1/8" wall thickness, for the vertical supports. The horizontal, (fore to aft), I constructed 1/2" plywood I beams, epoxy glassed over and capped with structural fiberglass channel.
The structural fiberglass was procured from McMaster-Carr
Last edited by CaptPatrick on May 3rd, '10, 21:11, edited 1 time in total.
McMaster is very good. We use them often. Work is allowed to have an account there as opposed to the $%ck@#s at Kellogg.
You may not need a catalog as they have a great website.
If you need one, I have tons, just give me an address.
They being an industrial supply house, and we being industrial, its a useful resource! That and MSC, and many others. All depends on what you are looking for!
D
You may not need a catalog as they have a great website.
If you need one, I have tons, just give me an address.
They being an industrial supply house, and we being industrial, its a useful resource! That and MSC, and many others. All depends on what you are looking for!
D
coosa
I fabed mine out of 2 pieces of 3/4 x5" coosa board glued together with eooxy, I screwed a piece of 3/4x 5" and glued it as a top/ tee section. for the uprights , 3/4 x5" going from hull to the underside of the tee /top section and laminated a piece on the inboard side that basically set on top of the longitudinal stringer and continued up to the underside of that tee section, refastened with carriage bolts, gave everything a coat of Sherwin Williams White self leveling epoxy ,easy to fasten the decking back down on to
- CaptPatrick
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- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
I know of one guy in Palm Beach, (actually the guy that put me onto the Coosa Board type product almost 8 years ago), that doesn't glass over it. Just fills, sands, primes and paints...
But for me, I prefer to glass over it. A large hatch or unsupported area certainly needs glass both sides to insure enough composite strength.
But for me, I prefer to glass over it. A large hatch or unsupported area certainly needs glass both sides to insure enough composite strength.
coosa board
coosa is extremely soft on dents easily, some of the commercial boats tried it and eventually recovered the deck with 1/2 coosa and a layer of cloth
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