I haven't been on here in awhile, but it is time to do a restore on my 16' blue wooden drift boat.
I will be putting line-x on the bottom to seal the bottom and the chine.
However, I have never performed a scarf joint in my life. I need to scarf 1/4" plywood for my rub rails and white oak for my chine cap.
Any and all suggestions/instructions would be much appreciated!
Thank You guys, you were very helpful last time I did a full restore.
Craig
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goggle router scarf jig,back in Guys thread he has some tips,key is to have a firm flat table.
if you dont have a router,then by block plain and finish with power sander.
I did my first one years ago,wasn't that hard,5 ply (1/4") its easy to see where its off as the ply lines wont be straight best to practice on one first.
good luck
there's also a thingy you can buy to add to your skill saw,but its costs and if you have a router already why bother
Heres a couple ideas. I built guys router jig, it worked ok to rough a 4 ft sheet, still ended up finishing it with a belt sander.
Just to do a couple narrow rub strips I dont think its worth building that jig. Just set up a flat sturdy table with a strip of flat metal on the edge of the table ( like a framing square thickness for instance) Just something to sand down to but not into. Square your rub strip to the metal straight edge so its flat and square, draw a square line 3" from the end at the straight edge, clamp it down and use a belt sander, block plane or even just a sanding block and take it down from the line to the straight edge, so 1/4" to 0".
You can make a great sanding block by cutting a pc of smooth 3/4" particle board..cut it exactly 9-7/8" long x 3" wide, round the corners with a 3/8" round over bit (a 1/4" will work ) and a 3x21" belt sanding belt will fit it perfect and makes a nice long flat sanding block.
Like Tung said, when you get it flat and straight the ply lines will be straight.
And this is how the 2 angled pc`s might fit together
On your 1x wood, if you have a nice table saw (I dont) make a jig to cut a couple angles with. I made a jig for my miter box to get a long angle cut with. I dont have a pic of that. If you can get a 3-5" long angle it will work ok. Glue the stuff up with thickened epoxy.
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