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Yes, this was the comment I found most "telling":
"So if this were a democracy, then the 99% of commenters who said that Kevlar was a selling tool only would have won the argument, and the 1% who actually have some scientific knowledege (darbrikrash) would have lost.
That's a good (and scary) reason to never believe anything you read on the internet." -Thunnus, THT
A re-work of the old woodsman's saying: "You have to know what the woods look like, before you can recognize the unusual!"
This touched on most of the misconceptions surrounding Kevlar applications in small boat construction:
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Quote: Originally Posted by
mike carrigan 
Usually a speciality company. Typically a very small flats boat and the like.
E-glass, perhaps "3610" triaxial has a multi direction strength. KEVLAR doe's not. KEVLAR has a strength at the direct point of impact only, not mutidirectional.
The hull of an offshore fiberglass boat must flex, work in all directions. KEVLAR will not. It's used in part with an offshore hulls structure in some cases. I know of no case that an entire hull is laid up with KEVLAR having to do with an offshrore hull. At least none that I know of.
It doe's not bond well with E-Glass. Allmost all hulls are built with E-Glass. It doe's not "wet out" well at all.
There's a small flats boat that I have allways been very fond that was once a KEVLAR hull. Please understand though, a small Flats boat is for backwater, inland use. Building it very light was paramount for the particular manufacturer of which I speak. Having said that, it was never built for offshore purposes.
KEVLAR is sometimes used in some very specific lam schedules in some particular area of a hull. Varies some from manufacturer to manufacturer that use it. We've used it.
If, for example, you expected someone to shoot at you. You might wish to reinforce a particular area of the hull to reduce the effect of the projectile. KEVLAR would be more resistant to a bullett than E glass. But, a hull bending and working and flexing offshore, KEVLAR is for certain not the choice.
It's light and it's strong and for it's purposes can be quite useful. Those purposes do not include the lamination of an entire offshore hull.
If there's an engineer on site that takes issue with what I'm saying, I invite the disagreement and the corrections to anything I've said that is incorrect. "I think much of what you say is correct. Kevlar is often used as a more effective marketing tool than an engineering tool. There are a couple of minor points to clarify:
- Sea Hunter does lay-up the entire hull using Kevlar. The boats range in size to 40’. Now this does not mean every layer in the laminate is Kevlar, it is not, but one complete skin is, usually the innermost (bilge) side.
- Kevlar is more often used as reinforcing material, for example stringer caps, rather than an entire hull, as you point out.
- Either vinylester or epoxy resin may be used with Kevlar.
- Kevlar skins are commonly mixed with E glass cloth, they bond just fine together.
- It is harder to wet out, but an experienced lamination crew can handle it easily. Vacuum bagging is preferred.
- The Kevlar fabric used in boat laminations is not the same material used in ballistic penetration applications, but it is from the same family (Aramid fiber)
- Kevlar 49 (Dupont) has 10X the stiffness of E glass, with approximately the same weight.
- Kevlar can also be obtained as multi-directional cloth, and can act orthotropically as can E glass. It can handle loads in all directions.
The main advantage to Kevlar is not it’s strength, but it’s stiffness. Stiffness is very different than strength, and for small boat design material strength is not really a factor. Stiffness is. This goes to minimizing panel deflections.
Substituting a layer of Kevlar cloth into a traditional E glass laminate does not really take advantage of the material properties, although it does increase the panel stiffness significantly. It won’t be any lighter, so the although the owner will get better panel stiffness, he doesn’t go any faster or get any better economy as there is no effective weight savings. Not sure he’d notice any benefit.
A properly engineered "start from scratch" hull using Kevlar can show real benefits over a typical E glass hull, as the extra material stiffness will allow the designer to reduce stringer sections, reduce or eliminate longitudinal members, and take material away from other parts of the structure that are not contributing to the vessel stiffness due to the use of the Kevlar skins. This can mean larger interior spaces and lighter weight, higher speeds and better fuel economy, which are advantages the owner can see and use.
This is not something done “by eye” because if you make a mistake, things break as it takes formal engineering training to succeed at this approach. Even with formal training things still break."
Darbrikrash, THT
Of principal note: 1.)Polyester resin is a no-no. 2. Boat building Kevlar (Aramid 49) is not the ballistic laminate. 3.Layers at points of stress, potential impact/crush hull sections, and abrasion areas-as an internal laminate are best uses. 4.Added resin needed to adequately wet-out Kevlar largely offsets any savings. 5. You cannot wet it out to "show" background wood grain, if that is your desire.
What he left-out was that, by orienting the weave at 45 degrees to the previous laminate layer improves both the stiffness of the resulting panel, but also diminishes the degree of penetration and surrounding delamination area should that panel collide with something.
I used to race canoes for a few years. My partner built custom kevlar and carbon/kevlar boats for guys he knew as a sideline. I worked with him, mainly as a pair of extra hands, but it was quite informative, since he had was a dual major engineering degree out of a horrible little podunk college down the road from mine (Michigan). I was quite impressed by how much abuse these hulls could take, as well as their weight. There is a race on the AuSable. It is a mult-day affair that quickly puts its participants in "zombie mode" collisions during the night-time legs are pretty common, as are broken paddles.
Now, on to Dynel.