Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Peter Cole Mouldie Scow - DXF format


The Peter Cole cold-molded scow design was the top dog in the Australian Moth class in the 1960's (before wings). It was superseded by the double-chine, plywood Imperium design. Here is a dxf file of the Cole Super Moth (he pushed the centerline hollow very hard on this Super Moth). This design would make a good wood strip project for someone who wants a round-bilge scow Moth. Dimensions in the dxf file are in meters.

Station spacing is:
  • Station 1 - 76 mm.
  • Station 2 - 304 mm.
  • Station 3 - 608 mm.
  • Station 4 - 912 mm.
  • Station 5 - 1216 mm.
  • Station 6 - 1520 mm.
  • Station 7 - 1824 mm.
  • Station 8 - 2128 mm.
  • Station 9 - 2432 mm.
  • Station 10 - 2736 mm.
  • Station 11 - 3040 mm.
  • Station 12 - 3333 mm.

To print or download, use the "open in a new tab" button (the one with the arrow) in the top-right corner of window below.





Two photos of the Cole Mouldie scow taken in Jim French's boat shop. The hulls were painstakingly molded out of 1/32" veneer and thousands of staples.




A vintage photo of two red Mouldies at play.



1 comment:

  1. 2178 now identified as Jeka D Stewart from Balmoral, a strong Moth club in the Middle Harbour section of Sydney Harbour, Australia. The reference is an Interclub race entry sheet from 1966(ish) provided by John Bowen of 2412 Zero.

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