Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Stinger - An 18' paddle board

Back in Dec I took a trip down to Uruguay to get in some surfing and hang out with some friends. The trip was great however I came to a realization that I really need to find a better way to stay in paddling shape.

So when I got home I fired up Rhino and drew up some plans to make a stitch and glue 18' paddleboard. I had been thinking about building a paddleboard in this size for some time and had originally considered shaping it out of foam, but having shaped 12' surfboards in the past and finding it to be a lot of work I wasn't overly thrilled at the prospect of shaping an 18' by hand. I had considered getting it machine shaped as one of our customers has a CNC machine that can do that length but still I wasn't sure I wanted a solid foam core, since that volume of foam, even in a lower density is still quite a bit of weight. Finally I decided to go with stitch and glue, since the weight would be comparable, it would be easy enough to draw it up in Rhino, and I already had enough plywood from a previous project.
So the particulars are:

18' Long
18.5" Wide
5" Thick

The front 1/3 of the deck is convex and the back 2/3 is concave. I'll probably put on a coaming at the transition to knock down spray.
After modeling up the board I flattend out the hull panels and arranged the stations to print and headed off to Kinko's....
Up next laying out the plywood and cutting the panels.

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5 Comments:

At May 20, 2009 11:33 AM , Blogger tres_arboles said...

18.5 is pretty narrow making this a difficult board for a 200+ pounder to knee paddle. I'm still interested in the progress of the project so please keep posting.

FWIW-I paddle a Joe Bark unlimited on Puget Sound.

Best,

David

 
At August 7, 2009 9:34 AM , Blogger Hein said...

Hey Matt, I'd love to machine that for you. -Hein

 
At February 11, 2010 12:06 AM , Blogger Jim said...

Actually having been in its presence and having seen Matthew ride it (who is I think right around the 180-200# mark) it's not that bad... However, one must realize that it's a lay-down model, meant to hand-paddle, not for stand-up or knee paddling. And it's also rather fast.

 
At August 6, 2010 9:31 PM , Blogger Tad said...

Any more photos or possibly videos of this creation? Looking to build a paddleboard and this one looks like a winner.

 
At November 29, 2010 12:10 AM , Blogger RD said...

are plans available for this Stinger?

Are you able to Stand up Paddle it?

Thanks,
RD

 

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