Erin has luckily volunteered to make headway on the seats. I marked out all of the mortises needed on the seat frames and Erin drilled the mortises out with a 1/4" brad point bit in the drill guide. I followed up with a chisel and file to clean up the holes. After I had the pieces finished I clamped the seat together and did a test weave. I ordered this 1/2" nylon webbing from the web (Erin picked out the color). Chris Glad emailed me some great instructions on how to weave the seats, I am also showing a picture from the back of the seats so you can get an idea how it is woven (it is very sloppy, but this is a test weave). I think it looks really cool. Next I glued the seats up with dowels and gorilla glue. I did a test glue of the joint with gorilla glue, as I suspected, the wood failed before the glue joint (sorry no pic). So gorilla glue will work just fine.
As you may notice, I do not update here frequently. The purpose of this blog was to provide a step by step log of my build of a 15 foot cedar strip canoe, I am done building and I am now adventuring. For everyone who asked while I was building... yes it floats, if you are building, yours will too! When I was looking for info and guidance on building my boat, the web was an immensely helpful resource, this is my way of paying it forward. Thank you for all of the kind comments, Enjoy!
1 comment:
Hi Frank!
Great site!!! Thanks for all the information!
Do you have instructions for the seat webbing? I want to redo mine and yours look just perfect.
Thanks in advance!
Jürgen
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