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Re: Bamboo, maybe. Cane, probably not.
By:Bill Hamm
Date: 12/18/2008, 10:06 am
In Response To: Bamboo, maybe. Cane, probably not. (Paul G. Jacobson)

: First look at www.gaboats.com . Platt Monfort designed boats which should
: cath your eye.

: For a skin on frame boat you use very little material. If you NEED ash for
: stringers, spend $15 and get a board to rip into strips. It will be a bit
: more than bamboo, but it will work better.

: Having said that, I applaud your idea to experiment with bamboo.
: Don't be too surprised if the material is more complicated to use than you
: first expected.

: Cane is a lovely material which goes as limp as cooked spaghetti when it gets
: saturated. Unless you completely seal it with epoxy, it WILL soak up water
: and when it gets damp enough it will lose its shape. If this is used for
: structural components, catastrophic failure will occur. Cane makes great
: seats, tho.

: Historically bundles of cane were used for sail-powered barges. Even when wet
: the cane would float. Cane can be woven into watertight baskets. It swells
: as it soaks up water, so a tight weave gets tighter. Some boats were made
: with a 'skin' of woven cane over a wood or bone frame. A coating of pitch
: sealed or prevented small leaks. I don't knw of any successful use of cane
: for a frame. Persoonally, I'd have more faith in rolled tubes of paper
: saturated with epoxy.

: For decades bamboo was the prime material for top-grade fishing poles. It was
: also the leading contender for 'cheapest' fishing pole. Currently it still
: is. Why the difference? Cheap poles used the bamboo 'straight'. What you
: get looks like a stalk of bamboo with a metal ferrule in the middle.
: Expensive bamboo poles, however, split the bamboo stalks, planed the
: pieces smooth, rejoined them in a smooth, piece with a gentle taper that
: was controlled by the rodmaker. They wound the rods with silk and sealed
: them with a good varnish or shellac. The result was a strong and very
: flexible fishing rod which was a fiber-reinforced composite material.
: Currently, bamboo strips are compressed with plastic resins to make planks
: which are used for flooring...more...

You can still buy bamboo fly rods, you will not like the price though :)

In my opinion they are still the best, even better than CF.

Bill H.

Messages In This Thread

Skin-on-Frame: Small SOF Kayak for Backwater Canals *LINK*
MS -- 12/13/2008, 6:35 am
bamboo, cane, part 2
Paul G. Jacobson -- 12/17/2008, 6:07 pm
Bamboo, maybe. Cane, probably not.
Paul G. Jacobson -- 12/17/2008, 5:44 pm
Re: Bamboo, maybe. Cane, probably not.
Bill Hamm -- 12/18/2008, 10:06 am
Re: Bamboo, 101
Charlie -- 12/20/2008, 11:45 pm
Re: Bamboo, 101
Bill Hamm -- 12/21/2008, 2:12 am
Re: Skin-on-Frame: Small SOF Kayak for Backwater C
John Van Buren -- 12/14/2008, 9:16 am
Re: Skin-on-Frame: Small SOF Kayak for Backwater C
Charlie -- 12/13/2008, 10:46 pm
Re: Skin-on-Frame: Small SOF Kayak for Backwater C
MS -- 12/14/2008, 12:02 am