Mile9c1
X-H2O.com
- Location
- Grand Rapids, MI
Maybe just the hull. The hood is supposedly 6.5 pounds.
Due to popular demand here are some pics inside "The Factory"
-these hulls are layed up with 1208 bi-axial mat and vinyl ester resin. Cooling lines are SS. Exhaust is thin wall aluminium made by x-metal.
Thats crazy!!:bigeyes:I think the red one is 48 lbs
Epoxy is brittle.
im not sure what it was just hull but complete was 230lbs:bigeyes:I think the red one is 48 lbs
What's ridiculous is all you 'non-hull-builders' picking apart every detail from the people that actually build and sell these things. Obviously they have tried different materials and found what works for them. If it didn't work, they wouldn't be selling stuff for very long and we'd be hearing about it.
I know about properties of different materials, but if it works, it works.
Otherwise, there would be only one way to make a hull, with one material, etc. Heck, Yamaha and Kawasaki are so far apart in how they make their skis, there is obviously more than one way to skin a partridge in a pear tree.
If you prefer the materials one person uses over another, go with them. If not, don't. Or I guess you can just keep posting and complaining about it when you're never going to buy one anyway.
I built my own hull, does that make me a hull builder? :Banane01:
I built my own hull, does that make me a hull builder? :Banane01:
Didn't Pancaker almost break the Wamiltons lightweight hull in half in 2 days last year at Daytona .I do not think a 65 lb hull would last long in surf .
Lake surf is not ocean surf
Didn't Pancaker almost break the Wamiltons lightweight hull in half in 2 days last year at Daytona .I do not think a 65 lb hull would last long in surf .
Lake surf is not ocean surf
I am wanting to say that was a OEM hull w/ a wammer hood. But a 60lbs wet laid flatwater hull is not built to take that kind of abuse. Even in the surf though if you hit bottom hard......I don't care what it is made of you will either crack just break something.
Full Wammer........... Madoyster bought it from Pete.
It did not last a day..........
What's ridiculous is all you 'non-hull-builders' picking apart every detail from the people that actually build and sell these things. Obviously they have tried different materials and found what works for them. If it didn't work, they wouldn't be selling stuff for very long and we'd be hearing about it.
I know about properties of different materials, but if it works, it works.
Otherwise, there would be only one way to make a hull, with one material, etc. Heck, Yamaha and Kawasaki are so far apart in how they make their skis, there is obviously more than one way to skin a partridge in a pear tree.
If you prefer the materials one person uses over another, go with them. If not, don't. Or I guess you can just keep posting and complaining about it when you're never going to buy one anyway.
What he said!
to answer riverrat's question, I have used 2 parts epoxy glue in that area without any failures so far. the exhaust is actually wedged on top of the scupper tunnel and inside the cut out of the hull. Even before the epoxy , it is acutally very well stuck in the hull.
next question!:biggthumpup: