patrick corry
solo canoeist
The weather warmed up enough to justify working in the unheated barn today. The plan was to steam and fasten outwales on the 1938 Old Town 50# canoe. I had found some old 'mahogany'- former gym bench seats from the 1960's- and had previously rabbeted and preliminary shaped them for the job. I steamed in the bag for about 45 minutes, and all was going well until the sharpest upsweep at the bow when disaster struck! The piece simply snapped in two. No long split, no edge grain gone awry, just snapped like dry kindling. It was oversized a bit since it hadn't been tapered at the ends or shaped in profile, but I don't think that would have mattered.
So, I chose a couple of pieces of Ash that had been previously ripped from an Ash slab 2" thick. It's been standing my barn for two years; air-dried. Well, after milling to close to final dimensions a bunch of squirrelly grain appeared and I abandoned them! Next, just for fun and to see how it would work out, I ripped into a 2x4x16' clear vertical grained Spruce I had. The piece was straight as an arrow and I was convinced it would yield perfect straight outwale blanks. Wrong.
The three pieces on my sawhorses are placed just as they were in the original piece. What a lot of internal tension there was! I ended up milling up the two left hand pieces and they are rather curvy but much more limber than the Mahogany or Ash; besides... canoes are curvy, right? I just made sure the rabbets are on the sides which benefit from the curves and most of my mounting job will be easy. I'll update with the results. I'm curious how they will look. Maybe the third time is the charm...
So, I chose a couple of pieces of Ash that had been previously ripped from an Ash slab 2" thick. It's been standing my barn for two years; air-dried. Well, after milling to close to final dimensions a bunch of squirrelly grain appeared and I abandoned them! Next, just for fun and to see how it would work out, I ripped into a 2x4x16' clear vertical grained Spruce I had. The piece was straight as an arrow and I was convinced it would yield perfect straight outwale blanks. Wrong.
The three pieces on my sawhorses are placed just as they were in the original piece. What a lot of internal tension there was! I ended up milling up the two left hand pieces and they are rather curvy but much more limber than the Mahogany or Ash; besides... canoes are curvy, right? I just made sure the rabbets are on the sides which benefit from the curves and most of my mounting job will be easy. I'll update with the results. I'm curious how they will look. Maybe the third time is the charm...