by Warren Nethercote » Fri May 18, 2018 1:19 pm
I really like rolled side decks, like a 505 or an IC24 (I've sailed one of the latter and oh, so comfortable), and thought about doing decks like the late Hull 222, but the thought of shipping full sheets of bending plywood from the US discouraged me. I settled on the standard 'small roll', but I suspect I did it differently than most. I prefabricated the roll, rather than building it in place. I didn't pick an arbitrary roll radius, but instead used the same moulded radius as the external radius of a 4 inch pipe (57mm radius as it happens). I had some kiln-dried black spruce strips left over from building a DN 'stripper' mast 20-odd years ago, and finally found a use for them. Black spruce is hard to find these days, since it is a climax tree unsuited for reforestation, but if you've got some its wonderful: clear, straight grained, and with structural properties better than Sitka Spruce (albeit a bit heavier).
Layup schedule: wax paper on pipe, then peel ply, then wet out some mystery cloth tape (maybe 4 oz) from my odds and sods box, wet out and lay down the strips, add a top layer of wax paper, clamp with surgical tubing. When cured, pop it off the pipe and you have a prefabricated cockpit roll.
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