: my personal belief is that rubrails are put on by designers who don't paddle
: kayaks. looks like they're more used to canoes, sailboats, and runabouts.
: try rolling one w/ nice hard 1/4 x3/4 or more rubrails or doing low sculls
: and they or your knuckles will come real off fast. save the bucks for an
: extra glass seam layer. if the join is ugly maybe a thin line of paint.
: -mick
The stripper I'm building now will leave screw heads showing if I don't do something. They're along the top edge of the hull where they go into sheer clamps. I saw a nice production kayak with a sheer strip of textile in a geometric design. This got me thinking that I could use a piece of ribbon, maybe an open sort of weave so it would bond well with epoxy, to cover the screws and glass tape over it. Then I got thinking it could be reflective material, nice visibility. In the end it seemed to be a wood sheer strip for the apperance of it.
Seriously, though, is a sheer strip going to bash your knuckles on a 24 inch wide kayak where the hull and deck meet at abt 80 degrees? I can easily use a piece of 1/16 veneer under tape if it does.
Messages In This Thread
- Rub Rails
Art -- 6/8/2001, 9:14 pm- Re: Rub Rails
Dave E -- 6/12/2001, 2:01 pm- other recommendations - don't bother.
mike allen ---> -- 6/11/2001, 5:28 pm- Re: agreed, NM. *NM*
LeeG -- 6/12/2001, 6:45 pm- Re: Another thought, maybe
Jim -- 6/12/2001, 3:35 pm- most seem ok
mike allen ---> -- 6/12/2001, 5:46 pm- Yeah, I was following that thread
Jim -- 6/13/2001, 5:34 pm- Re: most seem ok
Paul G. Jacobson -- 6/12/2001, 7:17 pm - Re: most seem ok
- Yeah, I was following that thread
- Re: Another thought, maybe
- Re: Rub Rails
Paul G. Jacobson -- 6/10/2001, 8:09 pm- Re: Rub Rails
Scott Dollmeyer -- 6/9/2001, 3:22 pm - other recommendations - don't bother.
- Re: Rub Rails