![]() |
April 8, 2008: Recycle
This may be a bit extreme, but what the hell. I always like free materials for a project I'm doing.
If I remember correctly, chopsticks are usually made of Birch. From Quote:
|
I imagine it will do well in choppy water.
|
Or in a stick e situation.
|
Very interesting. I wonder how he worked with such short strips.
Normally, long strips are attached to temporary forms that are a foot or so apart. With such short strips, you'd need many more forms spaced more closely together. Or else scarf all those chopsticks together to make long strips. But then you have lots of waste. Hmm. |
That is cool.
Now, lemme see it done with toothpicks. . .and I'll REALLY be impressed. :D |
Quote:
Quote:
|
For such short "strips", it's conceivable that he didn't use cross sectional forms perpendicular to a strongback (classic strip building style) at all. Perhaps he used a full surface form, like a balloon or a foam model, like making a paper machie globe for the science fair...
As an experienced canoe builder, I would think that the square edged wedge shaped "strips" would be very easy to scarf together. Even if they didn't make strips with flat edges, they could still puzzle piece together if they were scarfed together in a regular pattern, making a strip to strip seam like a masonry running bond. In fact, I imagine the "strips" would be more than one chopstick wide. When complete each one would look like a long piece of wooden low-angle rickrack. |
The pattern of the chopsticks makes the boat look really nice.
|
I like the ones stained with soy sauce. ;)
|
Quote:
Anyway, it's cool. |
There are a couple of ways I can imagine for that task. Toenail/brad the strips to each other like hardwood flooring. They'd stick to each other but pull out of the foam. But then you'd have a canoe interior full of brad points. Uncomfortable. Or... staples. That's what I used. A million staples. That's a million going in and a million to pull out. Or hotglue on the formside (pehaps covered in some mold release/plastic sheeting). The hotglue could easily be rubbed off the inside of the canoe once it was cooled and the form removed.
I just can't see forms three inches apart for the length of the boat. What a pain. |
I can't think of any kind of mechanical fasteners that would hold chopsticks to the foam. Plus, making the foam plug in the first place would be a lot of extra work. Kind of like building a boat so you can build a boat.
I also agree having a few score forms would be a huge pain. I think the only way it would work is if the chopsticks are glued together into strips first, and then the boat is built with conventional building techniques. |
How environmentally friendly is it to use all that glue, though?
|
Depends on how much use the boat gets and if he was going to buy a plastic boat instead.
But yeah, there is an environmental cost associated with the glue. |
fyi glatt:
I am a quarter of the way through retyping the text of my own stripping experience. I started before this thread but it seems appropriate to tell you here that I haven't forgotten your request for my story. I'm working on it. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:19 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.