The STORM is coming. Tape the windows.

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Kai Bartlett's new SCORPIUS XS available this fall.

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Design

it starts here

Evolution and DesignHow do you design a fast canoe? It's not a simple question. Hydrodynamics may have crossed from art to science a century ago, but it's application to an everchanging ocean environment is not so black and white. The reality is that 'optimal' hull shapes don't deliver great performance without adaptations. Design concepts have to be proven in the real world.

To build fast canoes, we design, prototype, and test. Then do it again and again. Good design is part theory and part evolution. We design our canoes using a mathematical model that allow us to generate new, fair, hull shapes by changing only one aspect of an existing design. When our testing uncovers weaknesses in the design, we can change only the relevant aspects of the design.

The parametric hull model is them imported into a CAD program. The model is surfaced, and the deck is designed. From the 3-D CAD model we machine molds to build an accurate prototype. It's a time consuming process, but it's the only way that we've found to make a lighweight prototype to test the design.

Corecell Image

Ozone builds two lines of canoes. The Kai Waa line of canoes were designed by Kai Bartlett. The Ozone lineup was designed by Mike Giblin.

The Kai Waa line of canoes traces back to the Wave Blade, arguably the best surfing canoe in the early 1990s. The Polaris was a revision of the Wave Blade which incorporated a new deck. The Scorpius was the next step in the evolution with a refined hull. The Scorpius proved to be an excellent rough water canoe for big paddlers. The Scorpius XM is a trimmed down version for average sized paddlers. The Scorpius XS completes the lineup for lighter paddlers. Having won more races then pehaps anyone in the sport except his wife Lauren, Kai is fully committed to excellence.

The Ozone line of canoes began back in 1992 when we bought the Makani molds from Daniel Waadt. Daniel was studying naval architecture at the time, and collaborated with Mike Giblin on a design that never made it to market. The failure convinced Mike that a system for designing and accurately building prototypes was essential. Seven attempts later the Hurricane went into production, and has been the best selling OC-1 worldwide. The Tempest is our OC-2 model. The STORM is in production. We're very proud of the design, and due to it's one-piece construction is the lightest canoe available..

Materials

the right stuff

Building a great canoestarts with selecting the best materials. Carbon fiber is amazing stuff, it's light, strong, and easily molded. We use lots of it in our canoes - more in fact than any other canoe on the market. We use primarily unidirectional (UD) carbon. Woven carbon fiber looks great, but because the fibers are crimped stresses are carried by the epoxy first. Laminates made from UD carbon are simply stiffer.

Carbon Prepreg Image

Carbon fiber prepregs are used for composite structures in aerospace and other advanced industries. The fiber is machine impregnated with high temperature curing epoxy resin. The resin to carbon ratio is tightly controlled resulting in the lightest and strongest laminate possible. This material is the so important to us that we located our factory in the heart of prepreg manufacturing in China to ensure the best supply possible. There are several state of the art facilities in our area. This allows us to work with these suppliers to tailor the prepreg to our requirements..

Epoxy resin is what locks the fibers together, but not all epoxies are the same. Epoxy formulations used for room temperature and low temperature oven curing can have surprisingly low service temperatures. When the laminates heat up in the sun the epoxy softens, and the laminate distorts. Woven carbon and glass will 'print' giving a textured pattern to the canoe. Epoxies formulated for hand lamination often contain diluents to reduce the viscosity of the resin which weaken the laminate. The epoxy used in prepreg has a higher molecular weight, contains no diluents, and has a very high service temperature. The result is a tougher canoe that doesn't print.

Corecell Image

What's in you're sandwich? Only a handful of core materials can stand up to the heat and pressure of the autoclave. If a core can take 60 psi at 250 fahrenheit, it'll fare well at the beach. Though we use a variety of core materials, Corecell is what we use most often.

Capabilities

manufacturing muscle

Creating a fair hullshape in a CAD model is only half the battle. In order to take the design from the digital world into the real world you need CAD's big brother CAM. Our factory is equipped with a full array of CNC equipment.

Our eight meter (26') long, 3.5-axis, CNC router was designed by Mike Giblin and built for sole purpose of milling precise canoe masters. This machine is accurate to within a few thousandths of an inch.

CNC router image

For making steel tooling for components like rudders and iakos, and for production work we have 2 machining centers. For milling seats and cores we have two smaller CNC routers. For plotting prepregs and fabrics we have an 18 meter (60') long CNC plotter. For hard to cut materials like hardened tool steel, or for difficult to machine geometries we employ an EDM machine.

At the heart of our canoe molding department is the autoclave, also designed to our specifications. The autoclave is an 8 meter long pressurized oven. The autoclave allows us to accurately control time, temperature, pressure and vacuum profiles of the curing cycle. Autoclave cured prepregs are the state of the art in composites manufacturing. The autoclave is where Formula 1 teams and defense contractors go when they need the highest quality carbon fiber components possible. The canoes are laid up in temperature controlled cleanrooms. They are then vacuum-bagged and cured in the autoclave a high temperature and pressure. The result is a ligher and stronger canoe than is possible with ordinary wet layup vacuum bagging.

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