I recently changed out gunwales and seat in an effort to reduce the weight of my kite. Going back a few years, I ripped out the pedestal seat I had originally installed in my Kite and installed a contour ash seat I made and hung it from the gunwales. The original seat is from a Carbon Wenonah Prism, so I assume this is their lighest option. The frame is aluminum and the seat is quite small and made of laminated carbon fiber. I removed this seat mostly because I like to kneel about half the time to take pressure off my lower back. Kneeling with this pedestal seat is next to impossible and somewhat dangerous. I assumed at the time that I had added a bit of weight in the process, but at the time I was more interested in paddling comfort than weight.
Wenonah Prism carbon seat
Ash contour seat.
At some point in the recent past I experimented with making a laminated contour seat. I used a total of 5 layers, 3 basswood and 2 ash to make the seat a little over 3/4" thick. In addition to the seat, I reduced the hanging bolt size from 1/4" to 3/16".
For comparison, I also weighed a regular flat cherry seat since I had one hanging on the wall. As a side note, don't web a seat until after you've cut it to length, just saying!
Some surprising results (sorry canadians, sticking with english units here):
- New laminated seat with all hardware and spacers: 1# 14oz
- Carbon and aluminum wenonah pedestal seat: 2# 14oz
- Ash contour seat, no hardware (this has been cut a bit smaller to fit in my Sea Wind): 2# 2oz
- Cherry seat, no hardware (a little smaller than the new seat): 1# 15oz
The winner is obviously the laminated seat. It was a little extra work, but now that I have a form it's easy enough to make more. The surprise is how heavy the wenonah seat is. I wouldn't have guessed that. Ash seat, heavy and the cherry seat a little less so. The laminated seat is a little more flexy than the ash, but I bounced on it a little and I don't see it failing unless I do a full flop on it.
Mark
Wenonah Prism carbon seat
Ash contour seat.
At some point in the recent past I experimented with making a laminated contour seat. I used a total of 5 layers, 3 basswood and 2 ash to make the seat a little over 3/4" thick. In addition to the seat, I reduced the hanging bolt size from 1/4" to 3/16".
For comparison, I also weighed a regular flat cherry seat since I had one hanging on the wall. As a side note, don't web a seat until after you've cut it to length, just saying!
Some surprising results (sorry canadians, sticking with english units here):
- New laminated seat with all hardware and spacers: 1# 14oz
- Carbon and aluminum wenonah pedestal seat: 2# 14oz
- Ash contour seat, no hardware (this has been cut a bit smaller to fit in my Sea Wind): 2# 2oz
- Cherry seat, no hardware (a little smaller than the new seat): 1# 15oz
The winner is obviously the laminated seat. It was a little extra work, but now that I have a form it's easy enough to make more. The surprise is how heavy the wenonah seat is. I wouldn't have guessed that. Ash seat, heavy and the cherry seat a little less so. The laminated seat is a little more flexy than the ash, but I bounced on it a little and I don't see it failing unless I do a full flop on it.
Mark