Quandary
Well-Known Member
The main hatch board in our boat is 10mm. smoked acrylic with a stainless vent cut in to an aperture near the top, it is heavy and awkward to handle and stow.
Our last yacht had a similar acylic board but it was in two parts with the joining faces cut at about 45 degrees to the surface to discourage water. There was a neat and secure little stowage rack just inside the cockpit locker where it was very accessible.
So I am tempted to cut the existing board in half with the cut angled as above, repondents to a Google search say that acrylic is easy to cut with either a hand saw or a powered jig saw but I am dubious because once I start there will be no going back. I favour the hand saw as guiding a jigsaw, even along a lath when the blade is angled could easily go wrong and I am more adept with hand tools. Obviously it would be easier if the cut was at right angles to the surface but if the angle cut was practical I would prefer to do it, it does mean that the material depth will be greater. I could cut a thicker wood lath first to the angle using a circular saw and clamp it either side of my cut as a guide?
So has anyone tried anything similar, how did it go and what advice would you give?
Our last yacht had a similar acylic board but it was in two parts with the joining faces cut at about 45 degrees to the surface to discourage water. There was a neat and secure little stowage rack just inside the cockpit locker where it was very accessible.
So I am tempted to cut the existing board in half with the cut angled as above, repondents to a Google search say that acrylic is easy to cut with either a hand saw or a powered jig saw but I am dubious because once I start there will be no going back. I favour the hand saw as guiding a jigsaw, even along a lath when the blade is angled could easily go wrong and I am more adept with hand tools. Obviously it would be easier if the cut was at right angles to the surface but if the angle cut was practical I would prefer to do it, it does mean that the material depth will be greater. I could cut a thicker wood lath first to the angle using a circular saw and clamp it either side of my cut as a guide?
So has anyone tried anything similar, how did it go and what advice would you give?