T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
309.1 | get the ABS | HPSCAD::WHITMAN | Al Whitman -- always ready to fish | Tue Apr 07 1987 14:15 | 7 |
| I can't speak to the ABS, however I'll vouch for the aluminum canoe
being noisy, and the ones I've been in do not glide the way fiberglass
does (something akin to plowing a bathtub through the water. It has
been my experience that the aluminum is tough, but difficult/expensive
to repair whereas the ABS is nearly indestructable. If it were me I'd
go with the ABS everytime...
Al
|
309.2 | Turtle Wax your hull | AIMHI::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Apr 07 1987 15:13 | 9 |
| Just to reenforce what Al is saying about fiberglass canoes, I once
read the results of a study where aluminum canoes were compared
to fiberglass for ease of paddling. It was found that a glass canoe
with a waxed hull will glide up to 50% better thru water than an
aluminum hull. The main reason being that an aluminum hull's surface,
when inspected under a microscope, is actually quite porous which
creates drag.
-Joe-
|
309.3 | Wax on ABS? | TPVAX2::HECK | | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:07 | 4 |
| Sounds good so far guys, but now I'm wondering about waxxing ABS.
Will it help ABS like it does fiberglass?
Thanks for the replies.
|
309.4 | CHECK OUT THE WIDTH! | BURREN::WATERSJ | THE LEGEND OF THE LAKES | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:20 | 11 |
| The one most important thing that makes one canoe easier to paddle
than the other is the width of the beam (the widest point of the
canoe). The wider the canoe the more water you have to push it
through....if you get my drift!! The Coleman and the Grumman
have...I believe anywhere from a 34-36 in beam! That is smaller
than the Merrimack or the Mansfield, they are 39-40 in.
And as far as stability goes...the width is also the leading factor!
The wider the beam the more stable the canoe!
John
|
309.5 | waxing works | AIMHI::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Apr 07 1987 18:27 | 14 |
| re: waxing ABS
Anything that you do to reduce friction will help. An easy way
to tell if waxing will help is to wax a small section. Then, lightly
draw your fingers over the unwaxed area to the waxed area. If you
feel your fingers glide more smoothly...then it will work the same
way in water.
BUT PLEASE DON'T USE VASELINE!!
Only use that when you need to stick it where the sun don't shine!
-Joe- (patiently_waiting_for_feedback_from_above_comment...)
|
309.6 | Another Choice | FROST::WALZ | Gary Walz | Tue Apr 07 1987 21:43 | 18 |
|
I know you said you had it narrowed to two choices, and price
was a factor, but the best deal in a moderately priced canoe
around (moderate, but not cheap), is a canoe made by Old Town
and sold by LL Bean.
It's 17'4", 34 " wide at the waterline, weighs 78 pounds, and is
of a shallow arch design, all of which means it tracks well and
is easy to paddle. Material is a Cross Link polyethylene, which
I believe will be as tough as ABS.
Price is $495, delivered free anywhere East of the Mississippi.
If I didn't have three canoes in my backyard already, this would
be the one I'd buy. In fact, I may sell all three and buy this one
yet.
-gary
|
309.7 | | TPVAX2::HECK | | Wed Apr 08 1987 10:26 | 10 |
| .6: Thanks for the input on Old Towns. What I had my heart set
on was the Mad River 17' Explorer, but big $$$.
The price you quoted sounds good for an Old Town but it's about
$200 more than I can get the colman for. I hope that later I will
be able to move into a bit better floater, but for now I have to
keep it inexpensive. If you decide to sell one of yours soon let
me know about it. I will have something by the weekend.
.5: no reply
(Hmmmm, sounds like a pun on midwesterners)
|
309.8 | | VLNVAX::HEDERSTEDT | | Wed Apr 08 1987 10:32 | 7 |
|
My father has a Colman 15 mariner. It is made of ABS and is lots
of fun.But it is much harder to move through the water than a similar
canoe made of fiberglass.. Not to mention it is heaver that a
fiberglass canoe by about 1/3.
wh.
|
309.9 | Coleman is good | MORRIS::MLOEWE | Low_in_sugar Low_in_salt..Lowenbrau | Wed Apr 08 1987 13:23 | 14 |
| I have the Coleman 15' canoe and I think is a very good buy for the money.
The "RAM X" hull is virtually indestructible and very easy to maintain.
It weighs only 65 pounds and I take it by myself all the time.
As far as it being harder to move through the water, I had no problem
paddling around in it last year. Even on a windy day, I would sit in
the bow seat since it is closer to the middle and keep the stern
into the wind without it spinning me around.
This year though I am planning on buying an electric trolling motor.
That way I can troll and fish on my way to certain spots on the
lake or pond.
Mike_L (Still_looking_for_an_electric)
|
309.10 | What is RAM X | TPVAX3::HECK | | Wed Apr 08 1987 13:28 | 3 |
| RE:.9 "Ram X", is that the standard Colman canoe hull?
Is it ABS?
|
309.11 | It's a Coleman material | MORRIS::MLOEWE | Low_in_sugar Low_in_salt..Lowenbrau | Wed Apr 08 1987 13:57 | 8 |
| re .10
"RAM X" is the name Coleman calls the alloy that the hull is made
off. It's kind of plasic/vinyl texture. The RAM X is "memory"
shape. Now matter how it is bent, it will always return to its
original shape.
Mike_L
|
309.12 | MORE ON CANOES | JOULE::KEARNS | | Tue Aug 04 1987 13:52 | 32 |
| LETS TALK CANOES FIRST OF ALL LETS LOOK AT MATERIAL. THE COLEMAN
IS MADE OF POLYETHELENE WHICH IS CHEAP BUT HAS NO STREGNTH IN ITSELF
HENCE THE ALUM. FRAME.BUY CHEAP,GET CHEAP. ABS IS A VERY GOOD
MATERIAL BUT PRICY AND HEAVY IT HAS MEMORY WHICH MAKES IT GOOD FOR
USES LIKE WHITE WATER. SOME GOOD NAMES-BLUE HOLE,MOHAWK,OLD
TOWN,LINCOLN,MAD RIVER.
NEXT WE HAVE FIBERGLASS. IT LENDS ITSELF TO MANY MORE DESIGNS BUT
WATCH THE TYPE. A) CHOPPER- RANDOM GLASS STRANDS IN POYYESTER RESIN.THIS
IS THE CHEAPEST,HAS LITTLE STRENGTH(GREAT
CANIADEN,GAZZEL,FIBERLITE,SEARS,)
B)WOVEN ROVING-IS A WOVEN GLASS MATERIAL IT THE NEXT BEST LAYUP
,IT HAS BETTER STRENGTH UNDER STRESS,ALSO NORMALLY USED WITH POLYESTER
RESIN.
C) FIBERGLASS CLOTH - THE BEST TYPE OF GLASS HULL,THIS CAN BE FOUND
WITH POLYESTER AND EPOXY RESINS. IT IS THE STRONGEST AND LIGHTEST.
THE LIGHTER THE CANOE THE MORE IT WILL COST.DUE TO DESIGN COSTS,AND
SKILLED LABOR. SOME OF THE BEST BRANDS IN THIS CATOGORY- (BLACK
RIVER,WENOHA,JENSON,MAD RIVER,OLD TOWN,MOHAWK,LINCOLN)
D) THE MOST EXPENSIVE AND BEST MATERIAL IS KEVLAR WITH EPOXY
RESINS.$$$$$
THE HULL DESIGN OF CANOES DEPENDS ON PURPOSE- GENERAL RULES- THE
LONGER THE WATER LINE THE FASTER ,ROCKER DETERMINES TURNING ABILITY,AN
ASYMETRICAL CANOE CREATES LESS TURBULANCE THUS IS FASTER THAN
SYMETRICAL. A ROUND BOTTOM HAS LESS SURFACE AREA THAN FLAT THEREFORE
IT WILL HAVE MORE DYNAMIC STABILITY.
NOW THAT I HAVE YOU TOTTALY CONFUSED ALL I CAN SAY IS TRY BEFORE
YOU BUY,AND REMEMBER THAT YOU GENERALLY GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR. IF
YOU WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE.JUST ASK .
PADDLE ON. WALT.
|
309.13 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Post No Bulls | Thu Aug 06 1987 14:24 | 1 |
| or buy Canoe magazine's anual buyers guide issue
|
309.14 | Need more info | DSSDEV::CHAN | | Mon Aug 10 1987 12:13 | 9 |
| RE .13
Can anyone point me to which issue of Canoe magazine that has the
anaual buyer's guide?
Thanks.
Kenney
|
309.15 | Vermont brand? | TPVON::VON | Gregg von Sternberg - TPSG Design Consulting | Thu Feb 14 1991 19:00 | 3 |
| Has anyone ever heard of Vermont brand canoes of Newport Vt? They
appear very similar to the Old Town at a bit less price. I believe
they are a division of Northeast Canoe. Any feedback on these?
|
309.16 | Stowe, Mad River | BTOVT::WENER_R | | Mon Feb 18 1991 14:38 | 12 |
|
There are two Vermont Canoe Companies:
Stowe Canoe company of Stowe, Vermont - builds the "Mansfield" line
of canoes.
Mad River Canoes of Waitsfield, Vermont
Both companies manufacture fiberglass canoes of many styles.
- Rob
|