Terry Keeley
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2002
- Messages
- 7,202
Have to build a new left sponson for my 40 boat due to a mishap last summer and thought I'd pass along a method Mike Hallam showed me some 35 years ago.
Block squared up and boom tube mounts drilled, I like 5lb Kledgecell (now Divincell H80), I make the width so it's easy later to measure and sand in the dihedral (see below). Divincell is available from Mark Bullard and Andy Brown.
Templates can be made of G10 fiberglass, plexiglass etc. Attack angle of 3* works well, I like a long flat planning surface (no "belly").
Mount the templates to the sides with double sided carpet tape, the fiber type seems to work best.
Cut off the excess with a bandsaw, hacksaw, knife, hot wire etc.
Sand to the templates.
Raise the outside back template to sand in the dihedral you want, I like 3*. The distance to move up is tan (dihedral angle) x the sponson width, these are 3.5" wide so tan 3* x 3.5 = 5/32".
By blending the dihedral into the front tips it handles heat racing water better I think.
I've used CA but find the skins can bubble so epoxy it is, I use West 105/206. I weigh each part and for small amounts 5g of resin & 1g of hardener works great.
The rear cap is the first to be glued in place. I use 1/32" all around except 1/64" for the bottom and outside.
Block squared up and boom tube mounts drilled, I like 5lb Kledgecell (now Divincell H80), I make the width so it's easy later to measure and sand in the dihedral (see below). Divincell is available from Mark Bullard and Andy Brown.
Templates can be made of G10 fiberglass, plexiglass etc. Attack angle of 3* works well, I like a long flat planning surface (no "belly").
Mount the templates to the sides with double sided carpet tape, the fiber type seems to work best.
Cut off the excess with a bandsaw, hacksaw, knife, hot wire etc.
Sand to the templates.
Raise the outside back template to sand in the dihedral you want, I like 3*. The distance to move up is tan (dihedral angle) x the sponson width, these are 3.5" wide so tan 3* x 3.5 = 5/32".
By blending the dihedral into the front tips it handles heat racing water better I think.
I've used CA but find the skins can bubble so epoxy it is, I use West 105/206. I weigh each part and for small amounts 5g of resin & 1g of hardener works great.
The rear cap is the first to be glued in place. I use 1/32" all around except 1/64" for the bottom and outside.
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