Agreed! With wood sidewall there is a certain degree of maintenance (wipe ski/board off when done, store in dry place, inspect occasionally and seal) . To me it's no big deal. It's called taking care of your stuff. But in another post about Joe Public, well he's clueless, which is why Gotamas fell apart.MontuckyMadman wrote:there is no doubt that if you have a wood sidewall ski you cant just leave them in the snow all night or in the car. You have to bring them in and let them dry. Yes, and a treatment once a season is also required. For every 1 gotamas that fell apart there were 10 that didn't. No doubt about that.
We have used maple, ash and even poplar for sidewalls. The poplar doesn't have good impact resistance. the ash seems work work very well.
UHMW is UHMW is UHMW?
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falls -- no need. I sometimes hot glue my sidewalls on, just enough to hold them in place. I know some major manufacturers use double-side sticky tape -- I use this too sometimes. The point is, the epoxy and fiberglass on the top and bottom surfaces of the sidewall is what holds everything together, assuming you don't have a major delam all up and down the full length of the edge. If you're using wood, separation is minimal compared to poorly treated plastics.falls wrote:Mine have all been bamboo sidewall - really just an extension of the core all the way over the edges (wondering if I stick with bamboo sidewall whether I should actually glue them on as a "real" sidewall?)
Oh, I've even used a few staples to hold the sidewalls in place, then layup!
Sidewalls or not
I have found that the easyest way is to build a cap construction instead of using sidewalls. Works good for me!
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