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Chris, I have had Ash on my boat for several years, with an actual season of use. I used it for my inner chine logs as the White Oak that came with the Tatman kit snapped when I had clamped them before installing them. I also read that it was rot prone but figured that I don't keep my boat in the water and that they dry well between uses. It bends well, looks good and takes oil (Daly's Seafin Teak Oil) just fine. I also replaced a set of outer chine logs on another drift boat locally. It hasn't yet been in the water but looks just fine and was easy to work.
AYC is a nice wood in my mind. It is less durable than Ash but is easy to work and as yo have noted quite light. I would love to find some here in Spokane for internal framing as I plan to deck much of it over so I can do some bigger water. On the woodenboatforum.com AYC has a good reputation. On of the guys there built one of his sailboats in the early seventies from AYC in a strip built manner. He keeps it in the Virgin Islands and sails on it very winter. If you want to look it up he posts under the name of "Wizbang" and recently ran a thread about some repairs he did in 2012. He has sheathed the boat in fiberglass and epoxy as well as painted it.
You could even do a set of laminated gunwales like Sandy promotes with AYC as the main piece(s) with Ash on the outside for abrasion resistance.
Just my thoughts, take for what you paid for them.
Rick N
Chris,
By using Ash you can cheat on the size of the inwales and outwales. Maybe you can reduce their size an 1/8" or so each dimension and save a little weight. That stuff is pretty tough. I have it on my 16 ft. Peterborough and they have held up very well over the last 8 years. The garage door even hit it on the bow end (outwale) and barely put dent in it.
I'd think if you went with a softwood you'd be replacing them down the road. Just my $-02 worth.
Dorf
Cris - If you have a custom millwork shop close to you ; see what they have for drops .[leftover rips]
My local shop usually discounts these , and usually have various long lengths saved . M
Port Orford Cedar or Alaskan Yellow Cedar would be good choices. I made a set of oars from AYC and a greenland paddle from POF.
They are light, strong enough, work easily, and very rot resistant. It will not take dings like white oak. I know a builder in Oregon that regularly uses POC and AYC for gunnels and other interior components.
My gunnels are made from Doug Fir, clear vertical grade with very tight grain. I concur that the draw back to DF is its tendency to split when worked and it dings. I am quite pleased with my gunnels. They are varnished and when they get dings I just fill with epoxy + wood flour. No one notices except my wife and granddaughters.
If I built another boat I would go with POF or AYC for gunnels. My interior wood components are made from mahogany. It is light, but in my opinion does not bend easily.
Fortunately I live a couple miles from Almquist Lumber and can most boat woods. Their supply does vary however.
opinions vary, but with the rest of your boat going so light, id go with stiffness/strength and rot resistance and choose white oak. plane your outer rail to 1/2" or even 3/8" and use a 5/8 or even 1/2" inner rail. White oak cannot be beat. it wont discolor as bad as ash. i have lots of grey/black ash that has been in elements.
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