Ivory Gull's new plywood tender

  • 21 Mar 2013 16:05
    Reply # 1248548 on 1242912
    Stand by James Wharram, honorary member and cat designer extraordinaire, O'Brien is about to move his tanks onto your lawn. 
  • 21 Mar 2013 13:54
    Reply # 1248420 on 1242912
    Deleted user
    There's new pictures in my "beam construction" album showing details of the prototype adjustable beam for Ivory Gull's new tender.

    It looks - and is - pretty obvious and simple. But after the complexities of single hinges and multiple hinges and multi-part beams and sling supported cuddies that I've been through in my head and in sketches it's a wonder that I managed to spiral into this rather than flying off into some nether hell populated with unfathomably entangled tackles and pantographs hunting in packs.

    I'm confident that this arrangement will work as required. But real-world loadings in the real-world application are the only practicable way to test such a basic, home-made device. So standby River Itchen. And if the design doesn't function up to standard then I'll be cutting lumps off a dysfunctional boat and trying again.

    Next stage is to build the basic structure of the cuddy. It's essentially just a big, flat tray with low, straight sides. Then when everything's working properly and I've got a better idea of what everything weighs I'll be able to add thwarts and stowage and a bit of lightweight superstructure to make the whole thing look and act more like a boat.
  • 16 Mar 2013 20:36
    Reply # 1244367 on 1242912
    Deleted user
    Hi Gerry. Excellent decision to use member photo albums - well done. We'll all look forward to watching this topic and the design evolve.

    For members who are not sure how to get to Gerry's albums, just click on his name below the image above. That will take you to the public view of his profile. You'll find the albums at the very bottom of the profile.
    Last modified: 17 Mar 2013 18:30 | Deleted user
  • 16 Mar 2013 13:43
    Reply # 1244145 on 1242912
    Deleted user
    Having just discovered member photo albums I've started a coherent pictorial history of this build of Ivory Gull's new tender.

    I've attached the full requirement for the build to the first album. It is:

    The project is to build a new tender for Ivory Gull to owner requirements. The concept is a novel variable-beam catamaran for carriage on davits. The beam is wide afloat and narrow when stowed. The requirements for the build are:

    light weight
    stowable on davits
    narrow stowed beam
    high platform for safe and easy crew transfer to yacht
    great buoyancy
    great stability
    the beam should be adjustable with crew aboard
    for emergency use the dinghy should be safe and functional in narrow beam configuration
    Last modified: 16 Mar 2013 13:59 | Deleted user
  • 14 Mar 2013 20:39
    Message # 1242912
    Deleted user
    [Webmaster edit 16.3.2013: Jonathan Snodgrass began a plywood boats thread in the Yacht Club Bar. It's started getting nicely technical, so I've moved Gerry's description of the build here.]

    Gerald O'Brien 6.3.2013

    Stage one of the build of 'Ivory Gull's' new tender is complete. The hulls are assembled - though far from complete as there's fitting out and finishing to come yet. I've posted a photo of an assembled hull in the photo gallery.

    Techie details: beam 1', height 1', length 7' 11". Max buoyancy 440kg, working load up to 250kg. The hulls are sealed units with six internal bulkheads creating seven watertight compartments. Each compartment is filled with fitted buoyancy in the form of plastic milk bottles with the lids glued on to prevent them shaking off and fixed in place with expanding foam. The deck is supported on the bulkheads and an additional beam fitted between each bulkhead.

    The box hull form maximises buoyancy for a given beam/hull height and gives an economical cutting pattern for the plywood. Fine, slender hulls with good high-speed performance were not requirements for this project.

    All hull material material is 3.6mm WBP plywood except for the bow and stern plates which are 8mm. Internal surfaces are unfinished. External surfaces to be finished with epoxy seal, primer and paint. Hull weight at this stage is 12.5kg each, which is heavier than I would have liked, but not too bad. My target is to bring the build in at less than my Walker Bay RID which is 40kg.

    All joints are epoxy fillets. I accidentally broke one of the joints where a deck beam connects to the side of the hull. The failure mode was delamination of the plywood, which means that the fillet joints are stronger than the wood. Comforting to know, even if the test-to-destruction was unintended. The repair was straightforward.

    The free-draining cuddy will be 4' wide and positioned above the hulls, which will stow away underneath it. This gives the vessel a minimum, stowed, beam of 4' and a maximum, operational, beam of 6'. Positioning all the load between the hulls increases stability.

    Gerry O'Brien 14.3.2013

    I cut and assembled the first composite beam for "Ivory Gull's" tender today. Thought I'd post a couple of pictures in the photo gallery to show what I've been talking about.

    The first photo shows the components and the second the assembled beam. It's just a small thing, 2' x 4", the stub beam that attaches to a hull and which will slide home into a housing on the cuddy. The stiffeners and plywood are stuck together in a sandwich with waterproof glue.

    The idea of beams like this is that they should carry loads disproportionate to their weight, as compared with solid beams of other materials. Material costs are also reduced, though labour costs are higher.

    The stiffeners are 10x20mm redwood. Not ideal but what I had to hand and OK for experimental purposes. The average density for the finished beam is 0.4kg/m3. This is 11% lighter than redwood and significantly lighter than that compared to most hardwoods. I'm sure that the average density will be substantially reduced in the bigger beams that will form the main structure of the cuddy.

    Power will be be oars or up to 4hp outboard. Though eventually I'd like to try a split rig junk sail on each hull as seen on Pete Hill's 'Oryx' since I see this as the first in a series of development vessels for 'Ivory Gull's' eventual replacement.
    Last modified: 14 Mar 2013 21:00 | Deleted user
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