Making a Paipo Board
This is a great Father & Son (Daughter, etc) weekend project
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The use of a "Paipo" board is
probably the oldest form of "board" surfing. It's recorded Captain Cook saw
the villagers riding them when he came to Hawaii in 1778. Those boards
were about 3' to 6' and were ridden "prone" on the belly, or on the knees.
The desire to stand up introduced longer boards. (There are many
web sites with the history of Paipo Boards, if you want to know more it's
worth a search!) |
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You'll have to pardon me I'm more the artist type than an engineer so I don't use plans, I let the wood itself determine what it's going to be. All we knew was that by Cory's height and weight we were going to make something about 36" in length, 16" wide, and about 1 3/4" thick. |
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Day 1
Approximately 3 hours of work. Sorting the wood and picking out Cory's pieces. Laying out the general shape and width. We are going to use 3 redwood stringers also. |
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Thicker pieces in the middle, thinner on the outside. The wood was about 2" thick and 3.5" wide. |
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Sanding the redwood "stringers." The 2 outside stringers are simply sanded 4'x2"x1/4" redwood bender board from the hardware store. The center one was 2"x4'x5/8's thick redwood cut down from a 4"x8'x5/8 piece. |
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Placing the wood and re-checking before gluing. |
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An all-weather wood glue is liberally smeared on with a plastic scraper. |
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| Using numerous clamps, start at one end and work your way to the other, tightening a little more each time until the seams are tight and the glue should be oozing out. |
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Let this sit in a dry place at least overnight. |
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