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Sprite
03-15-2006, 09:58 AM
Has anyone read the book. I bought a copy, kinda
interesting on deck coring. The interesting part
is when you get to Baltec. One of the Pearsons
was cutting up balsa so the water would not
penetrate like the squares but never pattoned
it. The other part was that wasn't until roughly
1963. Baltec added a skim coat later on for squares.
Hmmmm.


John

mbd
03-15-2006, 11:23 AM
John, speaking of deck coring, how is your recore job coming along? Got any pointers or pics?

ebb
03-21-2006, 07:39 AM
Sweet water intrusion into a balsa core would have to be constant and for a long time for rot to occur. The water has to move sideways thru the wood. The end grain is filled and penetrated pretty well with polyester. That was my observation of a piece of the cabin composite that was partly still in good shape at the mast on 338. Incredibly tough stuff.

I wonder if Baltec can be made with a thin absorbant border of glass mat between all the endgrain squares. In laminating, the plastic could then isolate each square of the core eliminating water migration. Balsa is still a cost effective way to make a strong deck. Patented foams are very expensive.

Sprite
04-06-2006, 08:52 AM
I think it was Everett Pearson that mentioned Baltec

and how he was cutting balsa into squares so the endgrain
was cut so that the would not meet. The Pearson's did
a test in the eighties with squares and a skim coat of
epoxy in Bristol RI they chained it to their dock and
left it for two years in the water in Narragansett Bay.
They only had 1 percent penetration of water with the
balsa squares and epoxy. He also mentioned they could
of had this as early as 1963 for racing. He mentioned
something about early Ariels and how they had delamination
of decks in 1962 and how it was a problem.

Just thought it was interesting.

John :eek: