"Live oak". Do you have to plant it in the bilge and wait? :)

Rich Knowles
Indigo. LF38
Halifax

On 2013-08-07, at 12:36, cenel...@aol.com wrote:

If you really want to use wood, and can find it, live oak is probably the best 
wood for strength. It was highly sought after for knees, etc. of the wooden 
sailing ships of the 1700-1800s.
 
 
Live oak was widely used in early American butt shipbuilding. Because of the 
trees' short height and low-hanging branches, lumber from live oak was 
specifically used to make curved structural members of the hull, such as knee 
braces (single-piece, inverted L-shaped braces that spring inward from the side 
and support a ship's deck). In such cuts of lumber, the line of the grain would 
fall perpendicularly to lines of stress, creating structures of exceptional 
strength. Live oaks were not generally used for planking because the curved and 
often convoluted shape of the tree did not lend itself to be milled to planking 
of any length. Red oak or white oak was generally used for planking on vessels, 
as those trees tended to grow straight and tall and thus would yield straight 
trunk sections of length suitable for milling into plank lengths.
Live oak was largely logged out in Europe by the latter half of the 19th 
century, and was similarly sought after and exported from the United States 
until iron- and steel-hulled commercial vessel construction became the standard 
early in the 20th century. Live oak lumber is rarely used for furniture due to 
warping and twisting while drying.
It continues to be used occasionally when available in shipbuilding, as well as 
for tool handles for its strength, energy absorption, and density, but modern 
composites are often substituted with good effect. Dry southern live oak lumber 
has a specific gravity of 0.88, among the highest of North American hardwoods
 
 
Charlie Nelson
Water Phantom
C&C 36 XL/kcb

cenel...@aol.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Alex Giannelia <a...@airsensing.com>
To: cnc-list <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Sent: Wed, Aug 7, 2013 11:15 am
Subject: Stus-List MAST STEP MATERIAL

White Oak is highly rot resistant, not like teak, but similar to mahogany.  Red 
Oak gets fungus in it and goes pretty quickly if soaked and should be avoided 
on 
boat parts unless somewhere unlikely to get wet.

My .02 Cdn worth.

ALEX GIANNELIA

CC 35-II (1974) WILL BE RENAMED
ON THE HARD SINCE NOV. 2006
Toronto Ontario

-----Original Message-----
From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of 
cnc-list-requ...@cnc-list.com
Sent: August 7, 2013 9:38 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: CnC-List Digest, Vol 91, Issue 19

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Today's Topics:

   1. Re:  C&C 30 mast step yet again (Ed Dooley)
   2. Re:  painting/varnishing wooder oars (Sylvain Laplante)
   3. Re:  painting/varnishing wooder oars (Sylvain Laplante)
   4. Re:  Waste fitting stuck (Colin Kilgour)
   5. Re:  painting/varnishing wooder oars (Paul Baker)
   6. Re:  C&C 30 mast step yet again (Steve Thomas)
   7. Re:  C&C 30 mast step yet again (Della Barba, Joe)
   8. Re:  Waste fitting stuck (Stevan Plavsa)
   9. Re:  Waste fitting stuck (Joel Aronson)


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