mike64
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2008
- Messages
- 1,042
I was reading an article about kayaks yesterday, and it mentioned the big range in price and quality-- on the low end is molded plastic-- heavy and slow but cheap. Fiberglass kayaks are on the higher end, light and fast but cost around $2500 new.
That got me to thinking, I've been reading the boat restoration threads here and glasswork doesn't sound too complicated if you're willing to work hard and get dirty. How difficult would it be to build a fiberglass kayak from scratch?
The main problem I can see is, the glasswork I've read about has all been either repairing a hole in a hull or glassing over wood. Making a glass kayak would require molding a hull just out of fiberglass. How is that done? Is a mold made out of something that fiberglass doesn't stick to, cloth and resin is applied and removed when it hardens? I imagine a hull and a cap would be made separately and joined, like a boat.
What about the cost of that amount of fiberglass? I have no idea. I'm thinking if it was doable it would be a cheap way to have a glass kayak, but maybe it would cost 2/3 of that $2500 just on materials. And should ANY wood be used for framing, or 100% glass?
Of course coming up with a good workable design would be as difficult as actually building it I bet.
So is this A) a crazy idea, B) not so crazy but almost as expensive as just buying a (used?) one, or C) a great summer project that would result in a cheap custom-built kayak?
That got me to thinking, I've been reading the boat restoration threads here and glasswork doesn't sound too complicated if you're willing to work hard and get dirty. How difficult would it be to build a fiberglass kayak from scratch?
The main problem I can see is, the glasswork I've read about has all been either repairing a hole in a hull or glassing over wood. Making a glass kayak would require molding a hull just out of fiberglass. How is that done? Is a mold made out of something that fiberglass doesn't stick to, cloth and resin is applied and removed when it hardens? I imagine a hull and a cap would be made separately and joined, like a boat.
What about the cost of that amount of fiberglass? I have no idea. I'm thinking if it was doable it would be a cheap way to have a glass kayak, but maybe it would cost 2/3 of that $2500 just on materials. And should ANY wood be used for framing, or 100% glass?
Of course coming up with a good workable design would be as difficult as actually building it I bet.
So is this A) a crazy idea, B) not so crazy but almost as expensive as just buying a (used?) one, or C) a great summer project that would result in a cheap custom-built kayak?