I broke one of my kayak loaders made from schedule 40 PVC 1 1/2" pipe with the weight of my kayak on it-something I built it specifically to do and have used this loader for a full summer-but this time it was brittle due to the cold- that got me thinking about our kayaks and the nature of plastic- linear poly used by the majority of manufactures of kayaks is tough, durable (but heavy) plastic. To cut down on the weight of the kayak, they roto-mould it thin in some places and thicker in stress areas. The kayak was designed to be used in the water when most folks fish- hence warm weather- see where I am going here?
Think about the folks who are reporting cracks- hard-core, fish all the time warrior types- they wring out their equipment to the max- add three basic conditions- prolonged heavy use, cold weather, waves and stress from bouncing around on the water- the loss of elasticity in the plastic combined with the stress factors could be the reason these kayaks develop cracks when exact same models used by other anglers never develop cracks-
...or I could just be full of beans and be completely off base-
Think about the folks who are reporting cracks- hard-core, fish all the time warrior types- they wring out their equipment to the max- add three basic conditions- prolonged heavy use, cold weather, waves and stress from bouncing around on the water- the loss of elasticity in the plastic combined with the stress factors could be the reason these kayaks develop cracks when exact same models used by other anglers never develop cracks-
...or I could just be full of beans and be completely off base-
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