scrappy sea fish
comments (3) February 12th, 2010 in Reader's Gallery
What's a California carpenter to do when the chips are down, and surf is up? When he's got too much time on his hands, and a garage full of wood scraps? What else - build a wooden surfboard!
Like a lot of carpenters, I tend to save more scraps than I will ever use in this lifetime. So when I set out to build a surfboard for the first time ever, I didn't buy a chunk of foam. Instead I rummaged through my scrap pile, and began making plans.
Redwood 2-by lumber left over from a custom gate looked like it could be shaped into rails. Some 1/8" oak veneer plywood from a cabinet resurface looked perfect for ribs - with a little stiffening from some thin strips of cedar and a dose of I-joist technology, that is. A cedar fenceboard run through the table saw also yielded a few planking strips, and some old redwood bender board looked handy too.
Hey, how about this nice Honduras Mahogany from that custom entry door? A bit heavy, but not in tiny doses. Maybe just a little 1/4" accent strip, eh? There we go. And now, all these little pieces of redwood, alder, pine, poplar, whatever and what-not, bet I could piece in a fancy deck design to use them up! OK, now it'll need some fins. There's some beauties available, ready-made. But why waste those perfectly good scraps of plywood? And this closet-pole dowel looks just the right size to anchor those fin-attachment plugs!
So there it was, from scrap-pile to surf-craft. But before I could hit the beach, I had to surf the internet for some finishing solutions. A few very helpful forums for wood surfboard builders (one website calls 'em "a splinter group") provided the answers to help a novice fiberglasser get through the tricky process. A simple brass screw in a threaded insert made for a low-tech pressure relief valve, in case the weather gets warm while sitting in drydock.
First time out in the surf proved the vessel a worthy seacraft, except for one performance drawback - operator error! Other than that, I consider it the finest piece of driftwood ever to wash up on the beach, with a kook in tow!
You can see over 300 photos of this project at http://eyemagination.smugmug.com/Craftsmanship/hollow-wooden-surfboard/10118158_6wPHf#696186038_Q3gUQ
Design or Plan used: My own design - hollow wooden surfboard
posted in: Reader's Gallery, surfboard, ocean, surf
Congratulations to our winners!
Congratulations to our three winners! Argyllshire for Eye Candy, larrysak3 for Dulcimer; and Triumph1 for "Home is where the hearth is".
Three prize packages were awarded.
First Prize
Fine WoodworkingMagazine Archive DVD-ROM
Second Prize
(1) copy of The Complete Illustrated Guide to Furniture and Cabinet Construction
(1) copy of The Complete Illustrated Guide to Joinery
Third Prize
(1) copy of The Complete Illustrated Guide to Joinery
Contest ended March 11, 2010
Winners were selected by the community and announced on March 22, 2010.











Comments (3)
I'm putting it up for sale
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=140398803177
Posted: 2:27 pm on April 13th
Walter in Alaska wliedke@gci.net
Posted: 12:58 pm on March 27th
Posted: 1:39 pm on March 10th
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