This blog will document the building of a CLC Kaholo 14 stand up paddleboard, beginning August 30, 2017. I hope to have it finished while the weather is still warm enough to take it out a few times (and take the dog along).
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Decorating the Deck and Applying Fiberglass
These are paper templates I made for the forward and aft ends of the board, getting a test fit.
Here are the aft cloth . . .
and the forward cloths after a layer of fiberglass and two coats of epoxy have been applied.
As you can see I have moved the project to the garage. High and low temperatures have been fluctuating too much outdoors, and right now the hollow craft is sealed--too much temperature differential could either cause enough vacuum or inflation pressure to damage the hull. As soon as the final coat of epoxy cures I can drill a hole for the breather tube, and from then on the pressure will remain equalized.
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Weekend of Paddling and Sailing on Lake Elmer Thomas
I took my SUP and sailboat, Gaia, to Lawton/Ft. Sill for three days, October 28-30, to visit my wonderful friends, Andi and Andrew Kley. ...

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It seems I can't stand not having a project to work on, so now I have decided to build a stand up paddleboard (SUP) similar to the ones...
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Here are the twin skegs being glued in place. The wood block is to keep them exactly 14 inches apart, vertical, and parallel while the gl...
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I took my SUP and sailboat, Gaia, to Lawton/Ft. Sill for three days, October 28-30, to visit my wonderful friends, Andi and Andrew Kley. ...
Bravo! Great job with precision cutting the curved corners of the fabric. Did you use the computer to draw and then print out and overlay?
ReplyDeleteNope, drew 'em by hand pretty much. I used a tool I have that follows the edge of the board and makes an indentation in the paper. Then I figured out each end and drew them with the help of some drafting tools. I folded the paper in half to get the two sides symmetrical. CLC says not to worry much about the edges, you can cover them up later with automotive trim tape. Instead, I used a circular cutter, looks a lot like a pizza cutter, and got really nice edges with almost no fraying. What little fraying I did have I was able to push in and the epoxy held it in place. So I don't think I'm going to need the trim tape.
DeleteI should have said I used the circular cutter to cut the fabric, not the paper.
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