- Видео 28
- Просмотров 80 962
Wayne Johnson
США
Добавлен 13 апр 2012
Hollow Mast Strength Considerations Part 2
This video picks up from part 1. Different strategies to assure adequate mast strength are explored.
Просмотров: 160
Видео
Hollow Wooden Mast: Strength Considerations
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.Год назад
How to insure that a replacement hollow mast will be sufficiently strong.
A tabernacle for my replica of 19th Century catboat "TRIO" built by the famous Crosby boat works
Просмотров 544Год назад
Tabernacle for my Crosby Catnboat
What is the best oar length for your watercraft?
Просмотров 4,4 тыс.Год назад
Use your boat and body measurements to size your oars.
My Viking Age Faering Rowboat
Просмотров 18 тыс.2 года назад
A Review of My Viking Age Faering Rowboat: Features and History
Building a Hollow Mast with Birdsmouth Joints Part III: Sheathing Mast and Spars with Fiberglass
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 года назад
part III: Sheathing mast with fiberglass Follow up for parts 1 and 2.
Mathew Walker Knot: Three Back Splices in 3-strand Rope: (Part 5 of 5)
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.4 года назад
Mathew Walker Knot is a very good terminal knot but must be tied in the rope before any back splice is completed.
Invisible Back Splice: Three Back Splices in 3-strand Rope: (Part 4 of 5)
Просмотров 6454 года назад
This Splice has the same diameter as the un-spliced rope
Sailmaker's Back Splice: Three Back Splices in 3-strand Rope (part 3 of 5)
Просмотров 3714 года назад
This back splice is ideal for chaff protection.
Sailor's Back Splice: Back Splices in 3 Strand Rope: (Part 2 0f 5)
Просмотров 4224 года назад
Simplest of back splices
Back Splice in 3 Strand Rope : Introduction (Part 1 of 5)
Просмотров 4934 года назад
Introductory Video (1st of 5) Covered in this video: Back splice foundation knots (Crown and Wall Knot)
"Long Compass" Part III of III: Generating a Table of Offsets
Просмотров 5345 лет назад
When the camber length is very long, a table of offsets is more practical
"Long Compass" Part II of III: Why it works
Просмотров 5355 лет назад
This video explains why the Long Compass works and how to calculate Compass Angles for arcs with a large camber.
"Long Compass" Part I of III - Ancient Tool for Making Large Radius Camber Arcs
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.6 лет назад
How to put camber in plank board or timber. How to draw circular arc with radius of hundreds of feet using a "long" compass. Part I describes the construction and use Part II discussion of why it works Part III how to calculate offsets
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope Part 7: Sailmaker's Eye
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.6 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope Part 7: Sailmaker's Eye
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope Part 6: Maiden's Eye Splice
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.6 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope Part 6: Maiden's Eye Splice
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3- Strand Rope - Part 5: Reeving Eye
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.6 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3- Strand Rope - Part 5: Reeving Eye
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 4: Rigger's Eye Splice
Просмотров 8 тыс.7 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 4: Rigger's Eye Splice
Six useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 3: Lever's Eye Splice
Просмотров 1 тыс.7 лет назад
Six useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 3: Lever's Eye Splice
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 2: Sailor's Eye
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.7 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3 - Strand Rope - Part 2: Sailor's Eye
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3-Strand Rope - Part 1: Introduction and overview
Просмотров 6 тыс.7 лет назад
Six Useful Eye Splices in 3-Strand Rope - Part 1: Introduction and overview
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered (Plane) Scarf Joint: Part V of V
Просмотров 5577 лет назад
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered (Plane) Scarf Joint: Part V of V
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint Part IV of V
Просмотров 7317 лет назад
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint Part IV of V
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint: Part III of V
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.7 лет назад
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint: Part III of V
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint: Part II of V
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.7 лет назад
Extending a Board or Plank with a Feathered Scarf Joint: Part II of V
Extending Boards and Planks with a Feathered (Plane) Scarf Joint: Part I of V
Просмотров 3 тыс.7 лет назад
Extending Boards and Planks with a Feathered (Plane) Scarf Joint: Part I of V
Building a Hollow Mast with Birdsmouth Joints Part II: Construction
Просмотров 7 тыс.8 лет назад
Building a Hollow Mast with Birdsmouth Joints Part II: Construction
Building a Hollow Mast with Birdsmouth Joints: Part I
Просмотров 10 тыс.8 лет назад
Building a Hollow Mast with Birdsmouth Joints: Part I
Very informative. Thank you.
Wayne, I'd like to contact you about this boat. How do I message you?
Sound quality too poor to hear
Verry good instructions but it looks rather complicated and fiddly. I aim to make 2 hollow masts using the bird’s mouth method. I believe it was 6 staves in each mast. The with of the staves will be tapered but not the thickness. I wonder if I will be able to manage. Anyway, after having seen your video I think that I will have a better chance to manage than I had before. So thanks for showing how to do it.
Very nice boat you have buildt! Much like these: ruclips.net/video/JoghpmoizUk/видео.html
Very interesting to see a Gokstad færing beeing built and used in the NW of America. And your experiments with various sail configurations confirms that boats and sails are developed locally dependet on weather conditions and intended usage. Having grown up on the west coast of Norway on an island I grew up with rowboats and boat building was part of the local culture. I have attached the Wiki link to the most popularised rowboat type these days, the Oselvar, which has been built in Os south east of Bergen. The Wiki page in norwegian has more external links than the english version. The boatbuilders tailor made their boats dependent on the owners length and the intended usage. Fishing, transport of people or goods, in calm waters inshore or offshore in open waters. The sail size and type was also dependent on the local wrather conditions. In the long deep fjords with high towering mountains on each side with extreme fall winds could capsize a sailing rowboat in seconds. Therefore the tension on the sail, normally a lug sail, was held by hand in order to let go and let the wind out of the sail with in seconds. There are local boat building traditions all the way along the norwegian coastline from north to south and they all have a design dependent on local weather conditions and intended usage of the boat. The Oselvar is traditionally built with three boards which has to come from fair sized pine trees. Enjoy! And I hope the Oselvar links can be a door opener to living boat building tradition in Norway Knut no.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oselver
Thank you for your video, it’s very helpful!
ruclips.net/video/uDHwrjhGfSA/видео.htmlsi=swQf2INGCIr_6pcw
Very cool. It's nice to have someone familiar with rowing discuss the fundamentals.
They rowed from the floor I'm sure, and brings new meaning to the automotive "four on the floor"
No this is simply the most helpful video I’ve found when planning my viking inspired riverboat design
What planks were used? Traditional craft were made using split planks, made by splitting the log with axes and wedges, rather than sawing the planks. They are lighter and far more flexible, but take long to make and require more skill. Your boat looks to be made of modern, sawed planks
Also, my experience with Viking age ships n fearing is that they tend to have quite large squares sails. A 7,7 meter long boat has a 10 sqm sail
That is so nice.. I can just see this boat in the Santee swamp . May have to get me a template
Master Johnson (or should I say Johansen?), sharing your historical & technical seafaring knowledge via this video has been both fascinating & a rare privilege, Sir. What a wonderful project! May Njord keep you & your faering safe 🧜♂️
Great piece of film for any boat builder. Thanks for sharing
Quite educational, thanks for the well organized documentary. Answered many of my questions, some I didn't know I had!
Good God, I know less now that before i saw this. plus for someone with less than 100% color vision, this presentation is very difficult to see.
Thank you very much for sharing the information and video.
Love your video. What year is your beetle? I've got 3 69s a 70 and 73
Jack don't exist
I want a 20 ft boat like that
Please excuse me, but the fulcrum of the oar is at the oarlock, not at the blade.
excelent video lot of infformation and experience
My brother in law has one of these up in the Sognefjord. It's amazing to row.
I want one but I want to mount a trolling motors
Oh but it does. max 5 HP but it helps alot going against the wind. But its really faster to row going with it Ht me up if you want to AirBNB it, the name of the place is Leknessund, Solund. Life vests are compulsory, the big north sea is straight in from the west so choose your time to go boating!
Thanks, man
So great! Thank you. How do you cut a taper into a hollow birds mouth mast?
Capt Johnson. It was lovely to see your beautiful vessel. From the way you have described your various nautical adventures and experiences I thank you for sharing your visual experiences from your locations and your various sailing plans you have experimented with on your beautiful handcrafted longboat.. may gentle breeze’s and fair-winds, grace and caress your sails as you journey throughout your life and waterways. I also have had an opportunity of sailing small Scandinavian in their appearance, and designs of vessels that have been built from modern materials such as fibre glass and resins . I have come to realise and appreciate the basic construction of design of the first sailing vessels constructed from wood and animal skins.
Great boat and great video! I've never been to northern Europe, but i live on a fjord in Alaska. The winds are either blowing up the fjord or down the fjord, so it makes sense to me that the Norse would row upwind, sail downwind, and leave the reaching and beating to non-fjord-dwelling civilizations. I started building an Oughtred Elfyn, I need to get it finished...
A Junk rig may eliminate the reefing problem of the lanteen.
Very nice job doing this video! FYI, both of my parents families came from Norway. I have been living in Minnesota since 1978 when I moved here from California. I was born on a naval Air station in Washington State, which I think is interesting in that my mother's family comes from Trondheim, Norway. That City was created more than a thousand years ago and 997, during the Viking age. It had its 1000th anniversary in 1997. My father's family originates in the Balestrand or Fjearland fjord area. Again, I'm very grateful for your video and find it very interesting. I have a sense that I would have done something like this had my circumstance been different growing up. Sometime I make contact you privately to exchange stories and genealogy. Tusen Takk.
Good on you for going to all that trouble with the calculations as well as the construction. Ive got a two mast Sharpie skiff . The masts are 22 ft main and 21 foot mizzen. They are two bamboo poles five inches at the base tapering to one and a half in at the tip. They cost $30 the pair. No thinking or calculating required. She's been sailing 12 yrs now. Cheers
In faroe islands🇫🇴 were im from we still use tees we used it since the viking age
I absolutely love your boat, i must know where you got the plans. How hard was it to build. Did you get a kit?
Interesting stuff.
Very cool
Amazing work!
Sailing simplicity was critical as survival demanded everyone needed to be fairly capable of handling the boats... sickness, disease, short life spans and war could easily remove more experienced individuals from small settlements. 👣🕊👽
Being the family SUV... seating was likely bundles of firs which would be used for camping, the low free board was also efficient for loading and off loading, especially of livestock, another reason for the low initial stability... Vikings ponies could leap into battle directly from the ship a shock and awe technique often used during raids. 👣🕊👽
Fur’s 😂
@@PeaceProfit Furs.
Awesome video! It's hard to imagine the level of intent that not only research and build the boat, but accomodated the experimentation with the performance and comfort alterations. Seems that most of the faering replicas have been made with raised thwarts and tholes (oarloocks) and other items. Doesnt this effectively raise the CG of the vessel and question any conclusions on the original's range and performance... especially to weather, as a dingy sailor would be sitting on the floor to windward.
ruclips.net/video/8KFCWThD_Lo/видео.html a rc Viking boat that sails in reverse. I can tack it in 12 seconds but I can reverse it in 2 seconds. This is my fourth comment here. All my comments seem to get deleted. Any idea why?
Great explanation and videography. Appreciated by a Swedish-American. - SV Free Spirit - Tarpon Springs, Florida Skål!
Been a carpenter for 20 years. A boat os something i need to challenge myself with.
I think the Vikings figured out a way to "tan" white oar. So as to make it tougher to split or brake. Any thoughts?
@@PETERVIKINGNAVY Oak? Break?
Awesome boat!👍😎🇨🇦🌊
Great information here, Thank You. I built Iain Oughtred's Elfyn Faering over the winter of 2021. I am in my second season of enjoying this wonderful design and have come many of the same conclusions as you. I built mine specifically for fishing the rivers and near coastal areas of Oregon, have been out in 3' seas 8 seconds apart and she handles them wonderfully. I am needing to replace my kabes, the oak I used is beginning to crack, what did you use? It looks like purple heart in the video.
Black Oak branch fork
This boat is a true work of art.
Oh my … I now realize how stupid I am. 🤦♂️ Can I measure my boat and get you to tell me what size oar I need?
My take is: "so that's why they invented the engine"🤔🤔
Excellent.
This is such an excellent little series of videos on eye splices. I love that you show them so clearly and explain why things are done the way they are and what the different features, benefits and drawbacks are for all the different kinds. This series on eye splices really deserves loads and loads more views - and loads and loads more thumbs ups too. I can't thank you enough for the time you've taken to teach us what you've learned. It is like discovering Aladdin's Cave full of treasures and hardly anyone knows it is here. What a treasure! Like I say, I can't thank you enough, but t I can start. Thank you so, so much.
Wonderful video, Mr Johnson. I've been researching faerings for awhile and your experimentation has been quite educational
OK, this is a bit overcomplicated, but necessary to demonstrate the concept. In practice, it is fast and REALLY SHOWY. Has a 'wow' factor to bystanders. This is not as strong as a traditional eye splice, I have tested both types to failure.