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 Well My Norman has ...............?
 wooden rubbing strips.

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fitvit Posted - 11 May 2016 : 19:17:24
My Norman 23 mk 3 is now on hard standing. I've noticed the wooden strips are a bit knackered on one side. I've stripped out the boat. I'm rather keen on keeping them wooden, but is there anything else I could use other than teak? Where do you get it from?


ford
7   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
cliveshep Posted - 14 May 2016 : 03:18:25
Beer? She's a lady, it'll be a chilled white or champagne!


Finally living the dream!
df Posted - 12 May 2016 : 15:26:08
My view is time spent rubbing down and re-varnishing could be spent moored beside a riverside pub drinking beer!
Mmmmm beeer!



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cliveshep Posted - 12 May 2016 : 14:37:23
It's a Norman Dave, rubber will cost more than the boat is worth

Dave is of course right - rubber or the synthetic version which won't streak and is cheaper - is the "bees knees" of rubbing strakes but it is expensive, timber is cheaper and is traditional.

wilks are pretty good:- https://www.wilks.co.uk/marine/boat-fendering/overview.html

Also: https://www.polymax.co.uk/rubber-fenders/d-fenders/

and: http://www.deltarubber.co.uk/rubber-fenders.html


Finally living the dream!
df Posted - 12 May 2016 : 08:09:28
Wood looks nice and all that but rubber is the maintenance free way to go, get the right rubber (epdm)or it'll leave black streaks.
After all it's there to take knocks and bashes and that can soon make wood look tatty.



NBAS--The communal colostomy bag of the boating community.
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cliveshep Posted - 12 May 2016 : 04:03:01
I don't know where you live, but for example Ridgeons in Chatteris, Cambs used to keep planks of hardwood. Pot luck on what you could get but sawn planks you could cut, plane, mould etc yourself if you had some cheapo basic tools. Sawn hardwoods can be relatively cheap, unlikely to be teak which is a protected species but usually Sapele or Utile - the first a medium soft mahogany variant with a lovely grain, the latter a hard deep reddish brown variant.

Some shops sell Meranti - avoid, it is soft, rots easily, and loses it's red colour in days in daylight, beco0ming a beige colour.

Oak is fine - if you can find it, although it is cream.light brown coloured but you could paint it although it prefers oil.

Google is your friend if you don't want to go to an importer, but if you don't want more than say 40 feet for the two sides maybe a friendly boatyard would sell you some, possible even mould it for you. Being a woman might help in that respect - we men are such chauvinists of course.




Finally living the dream!
trevork Posted - 11 May 2016 : 22:09:04
Add to that, they are a tad "sacrificial" so anything you can get to look the part without breaking the bank. I know some that have simply used stained and sealed softwood.
stratford4528 Posted - 11 May 2016 : 20:37:43
I bought a Jarra sleeper and cut it into rubbing strakes and screwed it on with stainless screws using a scarf joint to join them

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