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Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Sun Feb 12, 2017 3:25 am
by Warren Nethercote
I am starting to cut and glue bits for my keel-box. Per Drawing 16, the box sides are parallel-sided with one end being square and the other at an angle (i.e., the two long edges are of unequal length.)

I will be building upside down rather than upside-right per standard stitch and glue, but still want to prefabricate the keel box and attach it to frame 110 the way Chad did but .... I drew a small scale lines plan for the boat and according to it, NEITHER end of the keel-box should be square. The centreline of the bottom slopes up going aft and the centreline of the deck slopes up going forward.

Did everyone scribe the keel-box to fit? Or rely on the gap-filling properties of epoxy? With my lines plan I can adjust the geometry appropriately, but it wouldn't be the first time I made a mistake.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Sun Feb 12, 2017 1:32 pm
by jray
Warren, I worked the bottom of the keel box to fit the hull shape before attaching. I didn't have to worry about the top with the non turbo cabin version. I would do both if I was in your position.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Sun Feb 12, 2017 2:22 pm
by admin
Boy talk about amazing timing. I'm about to do the same project, Warren...only i have to destroy an existing keel box first.

Yestreday I spend a couple of hours with a dremel tool and a jig saw doing investigative surgery on my existing keelbox -- see pix. I was delusional thinking I can rip the thing out by working below decks. I'm going to have to take a Saws-All from the cockpit and work prgressively down to extract the whole thing, including cutting into the berths. This is going to be a major pain in the butt.

keel cut1.jpg
keel punch thru1.jpg


The reason is: the keelbox I built is too tight and the sleeve binds up so that raising the keel is a chore beyond belief and it kept getting worse. So I bought a 12 x 24" section of Delrin and will fabricate a new box to replace the original one. Unfortunately, as indciated here, six years ago:

6 yrs aog.jpg



doing the destruction first is going to be a chore.

Sorry to hijack your thread, Warren, but it looks like we'll both be working on the same project simultaneously. I only wish the boat were still in the backyard instead of 40 minutes away! Yesterday I discovered the power is out on MY dock, but luckily I was able to jury-rig an extension long enough to get juice from an adjacent dock that was still hot....luckily no one was at the club -- they'd have had to climb over or under my cord fence :lol:

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Sun Feb 12, 2017 5:31 pm
by Warren Nethercote
No hijack involved; rather, your comments reassure my decision to avoid the keel cassette altogether. But I do want to have more material at the base of the keel-box hull penetration than a single 6mm layer, so I need to have the profile match the keel line to allow a second layer of 6mm plywood to be attached to the keel-box before application of the bottom.

Thank you both for your comments - my drafting skills may not be forgotten!

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Sun Feb 12, 2017 9:56 pm
by Warren Nethercote
Supplemental: Availability of the forum makes you lazy. After removing clamps, I compared the glued up keel-box sides to my lines plan. The angled end corresponds to the slope of the centreline between frames 110 and 124. The 'square' end includes a generous scribing allowance of nearly 2 inches if fitted to inside of bottom skin and underside of deck skin.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2017 3:19 am
by admin
Wow, two inches? That seems like a LOT! Maybe I am misinterpreting the words. This bear-of-little brain needs an image to comprehend...can you provide a crude drawing?

No Hablo Ingles!

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2017 2:54 pm
by Warren Nethercote
Better than a sketch - braved the snow-storm to visit my shop for a photo. 1 1/2 inch allowance at the for'd end, increasing to 2 inches at aft end! There are lots of other drawings in the i550 drawing package with scribing allowances noted, although the 'scribing allowance' term isn't always used - I guess Lee missed the comment on drawing 16.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2017 4:40 pm
by r2heisch
I basically will be cutting mine to fit. The angled bottom of my keelbox matched fairly well against the bottom hull of the boat, between F110 and F124, as I am building the short cabin version. I'm leaving the top of my keelbox long and will cut it later when I get closer to installing my cockpit deck. The top is angled to match the slope of the cockpit deck area to allow water to run out the back.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Tue Feb 14, 2017 4:46 pm
by admin
Yah, same here, r2heish. (thanks for joining us, BTW!)

I'm going to use the same layup, two 6mm thicknesses and a skin of CF on the inside. I thought about using StarBoard but it's expensive and doesn't glue together so well.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Tue Mar 28, 2017 11:41 am
by mmarkomarko
Here is my idea for the keel box. I am planing to build a slightly wider box with a wedge plug fixed to the keel. A female plug would then be formed inside the keel box using expandable foam. The plug would be fixed in the middle to the keel strut and in the corners to the keel box with screws+butterfly nuts.

I am planning to insert the keel from the bottom so I need to be able to separate the plug from the keel. Some sort of clevis would also be fixed to the keel strut for lifting.

The keel strut will run from top to the bottom and the two halves of the bulb will be fixed through the strut. It is a 5mm stainless steel plate with various plates for the boat cut out from it so that it weighs less than 4kg now.

Image

What do you think?

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Tue Mar 28, 2017 8:03 pm
by Warren Nethercote
It should work. I am not sure that you need to make the keel box that much wider, but the larger wedge angle resulting from the wider box will reduce the tendency of the wedge to jamb when it is time to lift the keel. Finally, why have the stainless plate in the centre-plane of the keel? It will reduce the amount of lead you can carry in the bulb and will make very little contribution to keel stiffness, being on the neutral axis.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Tue Mar 28, 2017 9:54 pm
by mmarkomarko
Warren Nethercote wrote:I am not sure that you need to make the keel box that much wider, but the larger wedge angle resulting from the wider box will reduce the tendency of the wedge to jamb when it is time to lift the keel.


I think the wider box gives me slightly more lever arm at the top thus better embedment of the keel and lesser pull out and compression forces in the keel box? i may be wrong though....

Finally, why have the stainless plate in the centre-plane of the keel? It will reduce the amount of lead you can carry in the bulb and will make very little contribution to keel stiffness, being on the neutral axis.


Agreed, but will make top and bottom connections easier - I don't have to worry about losing a bulb in case of a grounding... will make sure that the top corner bolts holding the keel are undersized so that they fail first (: My chances of locating and fishing out a lost bulb in the river would be very slim.

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Wed Mar 29, 2017 5:59 pm
by ryderp
I wouldn't over-engineer these things (unless you're having fun with it). I've run aground three times, twice pretty hard (really run a-boulder). In each case the back edge of my keel was dented, and some lead was taken out of the front of the keel bulb. I've had no problem with raising the keel after these incidents, and their isn't even a hint of loosening of the bulb from the blade. The aft side of my keel sleeve is rounded a bit, so the keel never really wedges in there. Now with the fairing compound I used to repair the dents in the keel, I figure that I have a "sacrificial" trailing edge.

Phil

Re: Keel-box Geometry Question

PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2017 7:15 pm
by admin
We've had a number of "soft" groundings. That's pretty much the way it is in the ches., soft. There are a few proper rocks, but we haven't found them yet. Quite a lot of groundings though. I moved the boat away from my traditional waters and am extraordinarily unaware of depths where I sail now. Not that I'm proud of it.

The point is, we've been dug in pretty well and the keel and foil have been pretty darn robust. Maybe a little too robust, as I grind away at destroying the keel box :-(