Michael Grace
Lifetime Member
Is anyone aware of a particular point in time when the Peterborough Canoe Company may have changed the size and spacing of ribs on cedarstrip canoes? I am restoring two now, one of which appears to have been built much earlier than the other. The later one appears typical of many Peterborough cedarstrips I have seen, with 5/8” ribs spaced 2” on center. It is an Ace, Model 1438. I wonder if 5/8” ribs on 2” spacing became the standard across builders because I just measured a Lakefield and a Canadian Canoe Co. canoe, and those also have 5/8” ribs every 2”.
So here’s the thing: the other, the seemingly earlier Peterborough cedarstrip I’m restoring is a Model 44 and it has 3/4” ribs on 3” centers. This model 44 was built without thwarts, so it has no thwart tags. However, I have two other Peterboroughs that have early-style thwart tags. One is a model 79 and the other is a model 464. These are board-and-batten canoes so rib spacing can’t be compared, but both of these canoes also have 3/4” ribs.
Photos show ribs in the model 1438 and the model 44. In both canoes, planking is generally about 1.5” wide except for the accent strip and the top strip on the #44.
Thanks for any input,
Michael


So here’s the thing: the other, the seemingly earlier Peterborough cedarstrip I’m restoring is a Model 44 and it has 3/4” ribs on 3” centers. This model 44 was built without thwarts, so it has no thwart tags. However, I have two other Peterboroughs that have early-style thwart tags. One is a model 79 and the other is a model 464. These are board-and-batten canoes so rib spacing can’t be compared, but both of these canoes also have 3/4” ribs.
Photos show ribs in the model 1438 and the model 44. In both canoes, planking is generally about 1.5” wide except for the accent strip and the top strip on the #44.
Thanks for any input,
Michael

