illustrations by Marya Butler
Fabric decks, spray shields, and cockpit
tents are comfortable, space saving, and lightweight. They can
significantly increase your living space, make a
rough passage a bit safer and dryer, or
turn sleeping aboard on a cold, wet night
into a pleasant experience.
Fabric structures should be as low as
possible to keep windage to a minimum.
Well designed fabric foredecks and small
shelters may sometimes be left in place
when under way. If you want to, you can
sew plastic windows, vent flaps, and
mosquito netting into the fabric.
A wide variety of fabric types, weights,
and colors is available. Quality is related
to price — you get what you pay for. Some
fabrics stretch, fade, or wear more than
others, and even shock cords may not be
able to take up the slack of cheap fabric or
wet, untreated canvas. We've found heavy-weight fabric advantageous in
building these structures. And when in
doubt as to the best fabric weight for a
specific application, we call our supplier
and ask his opinion.
No matter how it's designed or which
fabric is used, a structure that flaps, sags,
or leaks is as bad as none at all. A good
support system is the key to success.
Every boat offers different options for securing and supporting fabric structures.
Battens, ridgepoles, upright poles, and
shock cords can provide tension and
support. Fabric also needs slope to effectively shed moisture. Even a heavy dew
will fill pockets in a flat and loose-fitting
piece of fabric. And a bit of flex is necessary because a stiff and unyielding fabric
structure will strain lines, bend supports,
and stretch fabric.Narrow boats with small spray shields don't usually pose difficult design problems, but wide hulls often require a more complex structure to provide proper support. Simple Supports Options for framing and support of a fabric structure are limited only by the imagination. A ridgepole is the simplest support and does a creditable job (Fig. 1). Ridgepoles usually run fore and aft down the centerline, although they can also be positioned on one side of a hull for a "lean-to" shelter. A boom is the classic ridgepole, but we've also used a 10-foot sculling oar supported by a forward tripod and a notch in the transom. Support battens may be rigged under or above the fabric or sewn in between layers (Fig. 4). One method for supporting fabric is an external batten much like a mountain tent (Fig. 5). All you need is a pocket at either end for the batten and small loops or ties along the rest of the batten length. If these ties are small diameter shock cord, they can be adjusted to keep the fabric at exactly the correct tension to shed water and wind. This structure only requires tie-downs at corners and along the edges to be self supporting. You may wish to drill small holes in the ends of the battens to provide a tie off point. Straight battens maybe slipped out of the batten pockets and rolled in the fabric, allowing a large assembly to be stored easily in a small place, in many fabric structures, the battens are different lengths, and having each batten labeled makes it easier to rig. If fhe batten pockels start to wear, consider wrapping the batten ends in duct tape. Fabric decks can be supported with beams that fit into sockets or notches in the gunwale or deck structure (Fig. 6); Sometimes these beams can be permanent and the fabric covering removed or left in place according to the weather. By laminating, you can make the beams to almost any shape for a small boat. |
These beams are best lofted and laminated right on the lofting board (Fig. 7).
Make the lofting board of 3/4 inch ply and
do all the layout right on the board, then
screw down short sections of aluminum
angle and use the lofting board for laminating the beams. We build ours out of
1/8 inch veneer.
The outboard ends of decks, tents, and spray shields can be held in place with snaps or loops and hooks (Figs. 8-10). They can be attached to the outwale, under the outwale, or in the case of hooks even inside the boat if you drill a small hole under the gunwale to provide access for a small hook. lace lines, up to a whopping 1/2 inch, which defies efforts to stretch it more than a few inches. Also, test everything before your first night aboard. For some reason, nothing ever seems to happen to fabric decks or tents till late at night or miserable weather, when you least want to get up and deal with it. |
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