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Deleted User YDKXO
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Nice video here from the Yachts for Sale bloke https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhEVcO2FWYQ
Never heard of a hull liner?
Never heard of a hull liner?
Never heard of a hull liner?
The liner issue has been picked up in previous threads Usually after I have raised it before .
Now you have raised it .So that’s two of us off PeteM,s Xmas listYou joining me ! I have never tried to gloss over the liner issue. As this video demonstrates, Fairline see this as a strength not a weakness.
You picked up on one point only in a 10 min informative vid .So let’s discuss it .
How old is that vid btw? Thought Mancini had 8uggered off ? Looks like he's still involved, yesterdays MBY mentioned him too.
I ,ve crossed swords with mainly PeteM and JFM .
Pete usually not happy by the reference to the word “ liner “ as they are used in cheap production bayliners with balsa or foam core in between .
As the boat flexes over time and or through holes water enters the balsa core and rot
.Initially the liners are lighter and stronger and use less man hours and less expensive GRP . That's Bayliner. Fairline don't use balsa or foam in between the liner and the hull.
How ever fairline s system is different I understand and not to be confused with liner boats I’ve been previously reminded by PeteM .
Goes something like this ?
They sandwich a grid between the outer hull skin and inner liner . Nope, as I have told you countless times they do not used a pre-formed grid, the stringers are glassed around foam directly onto the hull. The only thing they have in common with the 'grid' that you have in your mind is that they formed at right angles.
The liner is glued down on the grid . Wrong again, it's not a pre-formed grid.
The grid is made of foam .Its not clear if it’s one large piece lowered into the hull skin and glued in or glassed in or seperate sections glassed in or glued in then the inner liner they drop on top and glue onto the already fixed grid. It's not a pre-formed grid and nothing is glued to the hull.
It’s makes a stronger boat with a thinner outer skin and thus lighter hull , lightness helpful regarding performance in a planning boat . Wrong again, the liner isn't used to allow Fairline to economise on a thinner hull.
The moot point in my view is the risk of the deterioration of the glue or poor workmanship or both and the separate skills inner and outer delaminating . Wrong again, see above.
Also there must be voids in the gaps between the grid sections permanently covered and hard to access . Wrong again, if you life the hatches in my sole you see the hull and stringers.
I have not thought about this but new post production through the hull fittings through the inner liner , a grid then the outer skin could be a challenge.??? Wrong again, the through hull fittings are made directly through the hull, not through the liner.
I might be over thinking that one ?
As you probably know the trad method is basically a few blokes with a mould tin of gel coat some grp matting and tin of resin and a roller .
Taking time, a long time to lay up as thick a hull adding marine ply stringers and bulkheads as and when as they go along , Expensive in labour and materials inadvertently ending up with a heavier hull that will dull performance.
Although you add more Hp with bigger ( more expensive) engines . Fairline make their hulls with gel coat, grp and rollers, same as any other quality manufacturer. Note that the later boats are resin infused.
Coming back to the date I thought ( happy to be corrected ) that actually the new Mancini/ VPak ( sp?) had move away from there liner approach with the FL Targa 63 GTO .I thought the consulting engineers had swayed them away from there grid and liner method ? Not that I'm aware of. As far as I know Fairline continue to use the liner construction.
Does anyone know if that’s the case ?
Nice video indeed. They could have shown a bit more about the production process.
On that same channel I watched this video: https://youtu.be/H1EpD2X_Z3k
The Van der Valk Beachclub 600 (5:03) is a revolutionary design. That aft lounge area looks very cool!
P, just take my interest on this matter for what it is - namely, idle curiosity.Porto, I'm not surprised to see that you're as confused as error. My comments below...
P, just take my interest on this matter for what it is - namely, idle curiosity.
But while reading your comments I clearly understood what you are telling to PF that FL building technique is NOT, I struggle to understand what it really IS.
I mean, what's its technical rationale, really?
And are you aware of any other builders (among the supposedly "good" ones, I mean) who went the same route?
My understanding from a layman's perspective (with a few factory visits)...
1) They mould the hull in the conventional manner - resin / mat / men with rollers (or vacuum bag for newer boats).
2) The stringers are hand formed / glassed onto the hull (around foam). More men with resin / mat / rollers.
3) Certain bulkheads are added (engine, anchor locker, etc).
4) The single piece GRP liner (forming the cabin sole, some lockers / seat bases, etc) is glassed onto the hull / bulkheads. I believe other builders use ply instead of this liner.
5) The superstructure is bolted and bonded on top of the hull / liner.
I had a vague feeling that some of the It manufacturers use the same basic construction but could be wrong?
Fairline's claim, as I understand it, is that the liner provides an extra level of stiffness as opposed to just using ply for the cabin sole.
The others must have thought about this FL system of foam grid on the outer + inner liner on top ,but why have they dismissed it ?
Eg vac baggings that common and accepted nowadays , it not unique to one builder .
I,am not being judgemental on any technique just curious and can’t figure out why FL only use it or used it if they have recently set off down the vac bag route .
How can it glassed in when it dropped on top of the grid ? edges maybe but the huge flat areas under in the middle![]()
Admittedly I,am a rubbish wordsmith ,can’t seem to change that![]()
But I can’t work out the benefits other than a lighter and arguably stronger hull when it leaves the factory for the owner .
For the builder an element of cost cutting in labour and materials.
I'm not sure that there is a cost saving in this technique. You'd have to compare the cost of making all the floor panels from ply against the cost of tooling and manufacture of the liner.
If the outer skin is so strong why bother attaching a foam grid to it and then a seperate inner liner ?
That's OK, we're used to it!
Surely, a lighter and stronger hull is a massive benefit!
Are you telling me that your boat has no stringers? Surely not?