Metal and wood questions
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Guest
Metal and wood questions
I have an article in an old Scale Ship Modeller magazine showing a metal built destroyer. Builder used epoxy to glue it all together. Would like others opinions on the construction method and particularly the durability. Live in Houston and am subject to heat and humidity. Would also like to hear opinions on utilizing metal ribs with balsa covering for construction. Similar questions about glue/bonding dissimilar materials.
- ARH
- Posts: 2557
- Joined: Mon Jan 10, 2005 10:52 am
- Location: Land of the Cheshire cat
Re: Metal and wood questions
Take a look at the Moffet build , also the Duane build in scratch building. 
Simple but effective.
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Guest
Re: Metal and wood questions
I have looked at both several times and learned much. My question is more toward bonding wood ribs to a metal keelas well as the integrity of epoxying metal sheet together to form hull plating and other structures without wood backing.
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Yevgeniy
- Posts: 596
- Joined: Thu May 10, 2007 9:46 am
- Location: Kyiv, Ukraine
Re: Metal and wood questions
My personal opinion that the only 100% reliable method of metal=to-metal joint is soldering (if it is not aluminium) either by torch if it is brass or by soldering iron if the material is tin sheet iron or copper (or very thin brass).
All other methods are derivatives by definition worse in durability. I used two-component epoxy glue (not on metal) and would say it gives strong joint. Do not know about durability - used half a year ago
Also I know of ships from metal ribs but with metal plating (no wood planking) done by soldering.
Yevgeniy
All other methods are derivatives by definition worse in durability. I used two-component epoxy glue (not on metal) and would say it gives strong joint. Do not know about durability - used half a year ago
Also I know of ships from metal ribs but with metal plating (no wood planking) done by soldering.
Yevgeniy