martinteeluck
Active Member
Hi all,
Are any of you able to share your experiences, thoughts and advice regarding the fit out of a yacht forecabin?
The more aesthetic elements of this job will clearly be subjective so I'm hoping that you will be able to let me know your thoughts on the more "fundamental" aspects involved.
My own logic and thoughts are to place horizontal slatted wood strips (mahogany or close equivalent to match our saloon/chart/galley etc...) along the sides of the forecabin with a v.small gap between each and a thin cavity behind to allow moisture to condensate against the hull rather than us and our sleeping bags! That seems to make sense to me anyway...
The way I think this can be achieved is by using structural adhesive (I have seen some work done with CT1 adhesive which seems to do a bloody good job!) to secure 3x vertical plywood battens along the forecabin sides and then securing the wooden slats to these with screws. The forecabin sides are circa 2.2m long and 0.6m deep (Contessa 32).
What I'm not so positive on are aspects such as batten thickness (ie: to allow the breathable cavity behind slats) and grain, will marine ply be fit for purpose, what considerations should be given to grain direction, how to deal with curvature (although this visually appears to be very slight), what thickness do the wooden slats need to be to allow flex where required, how much machining of the wood should be done by experts and what can you do yourself at the boat with minimal tools, etc etc...I'm hoping a glued on PVC headliner will be easy after that but any comments on this would also be v.helpful!!!
I've had an oogle at Google but there doesn't seem to be any "how-to" guide for the above....as always, I bow to your collective wisdom and hope you are able to share some pointers!
Cheers all!
Martin
Are any of you able to share your experiences, thoughts and advice regarding the fit out of a yacht forecabin?
The more aesthetic elements of this job will clearly be subjective so I'm hoping that you will be able to let me know your thoughts on the more "fundamental" aspects involved.
My own logic and thoughts are to place horizontal slatted wood strips (mahogany or close equivalent to match our saloon/chart/galley etc...) along the sides of the forecabin with a v.small gap between each and a thin cavity behind to allow moisture to condensate against the hull rather than us and our sleeping bags! That seems to make sense to me anyway...
The way I think this can be achieved is by using structural adhesive (I have seen some work done with CT1 adhesive which seems to do a bloody good job!) to secure 3x vertical plywood battens along the forecabin sides and then securing the wooden slats to these with screws. The forecabin sides are circa 2.2m long and 0.6m deep (Contessa 32).
What I'm not so positive on are aspects such as batten thickness (ie: to allow the breathable cavity behind slats) and grain, will marine ply be fit for purpose, what considerations should be given to grain direction, how to deal with curvature (although this visually appears to be very slight), what thickness do the wooden slats need to be to allow flex where required, how much machining of the wood should be done by experts and what can you do yourself at the boat with minimal tools, etc etc...I'm hoping a glued on PVC headliner will be easy after that but any comments on this would also be v.helpful!!!
I've had an oogle at Google but there doesn't seem to be any "how-to" guide for the above....as always, I bow to your collective wisdom and hope you are able to share some pointers!
Cheers all!
Martin