Their rationale is that marine plywood is basically exterior plywood with a
lower void content. Several years ago the plywood association that sets
specifications started degrading marine plywood by allowing a higher void
content.
BTW I understand marine plywood is supposed to consist of 7 layers compared
to 5 for exterior.
I intend to build a 20 -22 foot plywood boat and use it for fishing only.
It won't need a yacht type finish but I don't want it to be marred by a lot
of checking either. I will be fiberglassing the bottom, outside and
interior sides.
Does anyone recommend I don't use A-B exterior and the reason ? Also - can
I put two layers of fiberglass on the outside in an attempt to hide checking
? Are there any problems with this that I need to be aware of ?
for anything else, decks, wheel house structure, exterior works just fine.
coat everthing with fiberglass with epoxy.
kevin rea
"jgubjr" <jgu...@nospamworldnet.att.net> wrote in message
news:Q9%B6.20678$IJ1.1...@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
<kr...@socal.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Nn%B6.156194$Ch.23...@typhoon.we.rr.com...
Some high end marine ply is guaranteed by Lloyds of London. If it were to
fail, you could possibly get another boat.
It is much more expensive though, so if you use AB exterior instead, you
could spend the savings making the boat better in other areas.
How many sheets are you going to need? One consideration is that you can
just order marine ply and it will all be void free and top quality. You will
want to hand pick the wood if you go with exterior ply.
Number of layers can depend on thichkness, type of wood and manufacturer.
What type of wood do you want to use? Does it need to bend or flex much?
See if there is a lumberyard or home store near you that carries both, go
put one of each in a wood dolly and look them over to see the difference.
Look at the piles to see the variance between boards.
Finally, price it out so you know what the difference really is.
I am not going to tell you what to do, but gather some info and edcide for
yourself. I am cheap, so my opinion is tainted. Yours is the important one
anyway.
-Andy
"jgubjr" <jgu...@nospamworldnet.att.net> wrote in message
news:Q9%B6.20678$IJ1.1...@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
--
Glenn Ashmore
I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there
of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com
Now why not use PT plywood
or at least the treatment stuff out of a can.
Good for 20 years. Might have to let the wood redry but that's no big deal.
ED
>System Three's "The Epoxy Book" (2000) recommends, on page 24, that the
>extra cost for fir marine plywood over A-B exterior is not justified today.
I'd agree with them. All the fir plywood I've seen recently is garbage, unless you're
trying to roof a house.
For boatbuilding, tho, you'd probably be better off looking at okoume or meranti
marine plywood, which is still manufactured to marine quality standards.
John
"John McCoy" <igo...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:3ad8c059....@enews.newsguy.com...
1) It is intended for rough structural work. The veneers are usually the poorest
grade available. The best face geneer you can get is a low B and the interior
plys are about the same as CDX sheathing.
2) It has been impregnated under pressure with a copper compound and usually has a
very high MC when it is sold. As it dries out, it shrinks so it is not
dimensionally stable.
3) The copper perservative interferes with epoxy bond. Not to mention that it
comes with all sorts of cautions on the MSDS.
NWCedarDecks wrote:
--
Joe Stafford wrote:
--
>
>BTW I understand marine plywood is supposed to consist of 7 layers
>compared to 5 for exterior.
Could someone tell me proper name for the "Finland" ply I started building
my interior our of 24 years ago? I counted nine plys in the half-inch pieces
nineteen to the inch) and the faces seemed to be A/A. It only came in 5 x 5
foot or 5 x 10 foot pieces and was so heavy I could only justify its use for
the major bulkheads.
thanks,
pm
The proper name is "Baltic Birch".
The earlier product had very fine veneers but the glue was interior only and in
some runs glue quality was variable. Primary use was for Euro style modular
cabinets because it is as stable as MDF and the edges finish so nicely that edge
banding could be eliminated.
They have improved the glue over the years. The standard is a Type 2 interior
hot press. Exterior Type 1 is special order from most distributors.
pm wrote:
--
>Finnish or Baltic birch mostly comes from Latvia and Northern Russia.
>It was called "Finnish" because 25 or 30 years ago everyone wanted Stoly
>but nobody would buy "Soviet Birch".
>
>The proper name is "Baltic Birch".
>
>The earlier product had very fine veneers but the glue was interior only
>and in some runs glue quality was variable. Primary use was for Euro
>style modular cabinets because it is as stable as MDF and the edges
>finish so nicely that edge banding could be eliminated.
>
>They have improved the glue over the years. The standard is a Type 2
>interior hot press. Exterior Type 1 is special order from most
>distributors.
>
Thanks Glenn. I must have gotten some of the 'good' glue because when I
originally tried a piece of it I heard it was "boil proof" glue. It was
claimed you could boil a strip of the ply and bend it into a tight arc and
it would take the shape without damaging the laminate. It did. Still I
suppose it could do that without being an exterior product?
pm
If the manufacturer claims to be built to a standard, then its likely a
good product, but any claim for its failure would be between the buyer
and the manufactrurer. Note also any warranty Ive ever seen limits the
replacement to the value of the product, so you would not get a new
boat, you would get a new sheet of plywood IF you proved the original
was deffective in manufacture.
There are reasons to buy good quality marine ply, but this is not one of
them
ron giger
Don't know about your part of the world but here in SoCal there is a big
difference between "Baltic/Finnish" and "Russian" birch.
My landlord is a gasket house. They use 11 ply (5/8"), for die board.
Tried to laser cut some "Russian", it was a disaster. Seems the glue oozed.
They will only accept "Baltic/Finnish" which they tell me comes out of
Finland.
I do not know that for a fact but have no reason not to believe it.
--
Lew
S/A: Challenge (Under Construction in the Southland)
Visit: <http://home.earthlink.net/~lewhodgett> for pictures
There are no problems, only varying degrees of challenging opportunity
-Andy
"John McCoy" <igo...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:3ad8c059....@enews.newsguy.com...
arbarnhart wrote:
> Is the fir you've been looking at rated AB Exterior?
> If so, it would seem that the manufacturer or your supplier is the problem,
> because if it really meets the criteria for the rating, it is not garbage.
--
Glenn Ashmore skrev i meddelelsen <3ADA0055...@mindspring.com>...
Now I once knew a guy who almost went bancruped with a plywood factory.
Anyway he knew a lot about it ,and what he said was ,that as soon plywood was
fabricated where the wood was, it was cheaper than bringing the lumps to where
the ply shuld be sold ,manufactoring it there.
----------- Now I don't know how it work today ,Ply -- even vorse quality are
water resistance, and if it can expand equally in a construction if structured
reasoble nothing wrong with ply :))
Guess the same count for houses, ------ wonder how much acturly are sold for
boats :))
What about pressed sprokes or crasched woods like the building site sheets that
sometimes substitude ply for things like fences ? ----- Im'e quite sure I could
do a set of ribs for a small boat from that. ------ that's water resistance to.
Have a nice day.
P.C.
>
>Is the fir you've been looking at rated AB Exterior?
>If so, it would seem that the manufacturer or your supplier is the problem,
>because if it really meets the criteria for the rating, it is not garbage.
It's garbage by comparison to the foreign made marine plywood. The
criteria for the rating (for US made fir plywood) have been allowed to
degrade, not to mention a lot of it only marginally meets the spec.
John
What exactly are you encountering that makes you call the fir exterior AB
ply "garbage"?
Also, if you don't mind sharing the info, what part of the country are you
in, what supplier have you been using?
-Andy
"John McCoy" <igo...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:3ada3215....@enews.newsguy.com...
>
>Degrade how?
>Voids or surface fills would disqualify it as exterior AB. Glue has to be
>"waterproof".
Exterior fir plywood with no voids!!!??? MARINE fir plywood with no
voids????!!!!
>What exactly are you encountering that makes you call the fir exterior AB
>ply "garbage"?
>Also, if you don't mind sharing the info, what part of the country are you
>in, what supplier have you been using?
You evidently do not live in the USA. YOu must live elsewhere, perhaps
an alternate parallel universe where fir plywood is built as it is
supposed to be.
The AA and AB fir MARINE plywood carried by Harbor is very high quality.
However they (Harbor) charge a premium price for it, and they get that price
because their customers know that they do not accept "marine fir" with voids
from their supplyer. I can find better prices on everything that Harbor
sells, but their quality control and inspection are absolutely world class.
IMHO, it IS possible to find high quality fir marine plywood . . . but not
at Home Depot or Lowes. Harbor is a specialty supplyer to the boatbuilding
and signmaking industry. They do not market to or compete with the home
building industry.
Use a supplyer that you can trust or buy only what you can inspect and hand
pick yourself.
Buy the imported BS1088 certified stuff.
Live with the risk of using cheaper materials.
Tom Bloomer,
Hartly, DE USA
--
Jacques Mertens
Boat Plans OnLine
http://www.bateau.com
"jgubjr" <jgu...@nospamworldnet.att.net> wrote in message
news:Q9%B6.20678$IJ1.1...@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
>
>Degrade how?
>Voids or surface fills would disqualify it as exterior AB. Glue has to be
>"waterproof".
Voids used to disqualify it. Not under the current rules. And no matter how
waterproof the glue, if there's not enough of it, the plys will delaminate, which
I've seen happen on "marine" graded fir plywood.
>What exactly are you encountering that makes you call the fir exterior AB
>ply "garbage"?
>Also, if you don't mind sharing the info, what part of the country are you
>in, what supplier have you been using?
South Fla. Don't recall what the manufacturer(s) were for the "marine" fir
ply. If I want marine ply, I'd order okoume from Boulters, I wouldn't even
look at fir now.
John
I spent a half hour this afternoon looking through an entire pile of "#2"
1X4s, I finally found one without knots and/or bark. 20+ years ago, I
remember wood like that to be strictly construction grade and would never be
rated #2. I suspect a widespread right wing conspiracy to hoard all the
finer woods.
> Voids or surface fills would disqualify it as exterior AB. Glue has to be
> "waterproof".
> What exactly are you encountering that makes you call the fir exterior AB
> ply "garbage"?
> Also, if you don't mind sharing the info, what part of the country are you
> in, what supplier have you been using?
I live in coastal Georgia, US. I have checked AB ext. Fir 1/4"ply in 14
building supply stores from Jacksonville to Savannah. The "good" A side
typically contains between 10 to 20 football shaped fills per sheet--the bad
B side between 20 to 30 small knots/knotholes.
I've yet to find any that would qualify by the criteria you describe, but if
I ever do I'm buying all my wallet will allow.
--
Rhett
rave...@bigfoot.com
<
Pat Ford skrev i meddelelsen <3ada7922...@news.halcyon.com>...
>On Mon, 16 Apr 2001 02:57:42 GMT, "arbarnhart" <arbar...@aol.com>
>wrote:
>
>>
>>Degrade how?
>>Voids or surface fills would disqualify it as exterior AB. Glue has to be
>>"waterproof".
>Exterior fir plywood with no voids!!!??? MARINE fir plywood with no
>voids????!!!!
>
>>What exactly are you encountering that makes you call the fir exterior AB
>>ply "garbage"?
>>Also, if you don't mind sharing the info, what part of the country are you
>>in, what supplier have you been using?
>
>You evidently do not live in the USA. YOu must live elsewhere, perhaps
>an alternate parallel universe where fir plywood is built as it is
>supposed to be.
Well in a situasion where someone want to _buy_ a ply boat ,it will be strange
if the buyer don't care if the material is pine or mahogony , and what quality.
And I guess that this also mean ,that you can't expect a profesional builder to
use the cheapest quality he can get ,as then it will be quite hard to find
clients ;))
What would you expect ,if you was about to buy a ply boat ; wouldn't you ask for
first class materials, from a profesional builder :))
Wouldn't you say that you don't care if a builder could save a few $.
pm
--
Jacques Mertens
Boat Plans OnLine
http://www.bateau.com
"Migchelsen" <migch...@aol.com> wrote in message
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