Showing posts with label recycled materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycled materials. Show all posts

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Right Back at It

Fresh on the heels of finishing Marlon's Longboard, I feel compelled to knock out another board.  This is the 4'10" skinny template (on the left) and the 4'10" wide (4'10"c)


The wide version is what I decided to build.  This is the foam donor (got it free from a guy wanting to get out of wavesailing).


Here is the template laid out on the bottom deck - it just barely fits.  I'll probably opt to use a planer to get the rails trimmed.


This will involve some foam splicing as I'll have to remove some hardware (mast track box, EPS vent, foot strap screws)

I'll place slight cuts in the bottom deck rails - not the deep 45 degree ones that a lot of the manufacturers are using.  Once I get the old composite material off, this one should got fast.

Friday, December 14, 2018

Use Protection

I finally found a use for all the old wetsuits I had taking up room in my garage!!!  Foil wing protectors!!!  With La's incredible sewing powers, and my vast intellect (and ginormous OCD) we were able to put this together last night.



Here's the Maliko 200 all covered up.  Now the foil can ride in the bed of the truck without shifting around or putting undue stress on the wings (SCRATCHES!!!)


I absolutely love it when La makes stuff for me!!!  Makes me feel special!

Friday, March 6, 2009

Plastiki





A person who wants to bring awareness to the Pacific Gyre filled with plastic garbage is funding a project that is making a catamaran out of recycled plastic bottles and alternative building materials.

Alot of similar efforts have been circulating in the backyard surfboard making circles for several years now and are even showing up in production levels to a degree. Fiberglass is being replaced with bamboo fibers and polyurethane blanks have moved to expanded polystrene and now to soy-based foams. It'll be a few more years until these new materials fill in the larger market share (oil prices will have to go up again, production infrastructure will have to come into place and most important - the mentality of the market will have to change to be more accepting of these products, which will be driven by the durability and user friendliness tests being performed today).

As an engineer, I am glad there are alternative materials popping up - each has properties you'd want to tap into. As a father who wants a better place for my kids to grow and live in, and a surfer that sees and has to pick up garbage all the time, to be able to take water/drink bottles and turn them into items we use everyday would be awesome.

La is really stoked to get to a warm water locale again (Okinawa-bound). She wants to crew on a racing catamaran and hit the circuit with me (Hobie Tiger...). So browsing the web I stumbled on this article. I think this guy is on the extremist side (he has a lot of money and time on his hands, and get this - he isn't even a sailor and he's looking to go transoceanic - what happened to work ups and risk management?), but the approach is interesting - from a marine architecture point of view.

Photos credited to:
Mark Costantini / The Chronicle

Main article is located here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/03/BA42167TCI.DTL