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About
IFG

International
Fiberglass (IFG) has over 34 years experience in custom fiberglass
fabrication for industrial and other uses. In addition to custom
fabrication, IFG manufactures catamaran sailboats.
Learn about how IFG got its start... or jump ahead to recent
projects.
Once
Upon A Time . . .
The
Story of International Fiberglass
by
Jim Vickers with a postscript by Rhoda Meldau
Pondering
the plight of artists in a pickle -- a Van Gogh voluntarily crossing
the bar after hundreds of paintings produce a single sale; a Gauguin
expiring of syphilis in pagan poverty, his work rejected -- moistens
the eyes of all sensitive mortals. Yet the tragedy of the popularly
unrecognized but talented artist is the accepted common fate of
the skilled craftsman, one of whom is Frank Meldau, who exercises
his talent at IFG (International Fiberglass) on South Miami Boulevard
between the Research Triangle Park and Durham.
Those in the fiberglass trade, however, know Frank well, as Carrboro
designer Diane Gillis discovered two years ago when she was looking
for someone to embody her plans for the Airport-Playport
in Terminal A at the Raleigh-Durham International Airport and followed
up on references to IFG. "It was a pretty loose situation,"
Diane says of the bedroom-size playarea airplane mock-up. "Frank
had to really put a lot into it to make the curved fuselage and
wings meet the space because there was really no way that I could
dimension it on a drawing. It was a very custom job."
Wallace Kuralt, the proprietor of the Intimate Bookshop chain in
Chapel Hill, Raleigh, Winston Salem, and elsewhere, has engaged
Frank often to execute his personal designs---oversized books, computer
stands, a copper-toned inside awning for his Charlotte store. "He's
a remarkable craftsman," Wallace asserts. "He is great doing
whatever. Just the touch and feel of everything he does is so right."
To create an object from fiberglass, Frank first creates a "plug",
a true-size rendition of the final product, from which he takes
a mold. "Almost any material can be used for the plug,"
Frank explains, "just as long as I can get the shape." For
the Playport, urethane, plastic and random odds and ends went into
the plug.
A
First Encounter with the Catamaran
Frank refined the draftsmanship necessary to his
craft in engineering courses taken at the University of New Mexico
during a 1951-1954 hitch in the U.S. Air Force and applied that
education in the Special Weapons Command at Kirkland Air Force Base
drawing plans and "exploding-view" technical illustrations
to be used to place brackets on aircraft to carry nuclear weapons.
While at Kirkland, Frank had two adventures that altered the course
of his life, one temporarily, and the other permanently. Attending
a dinosaur dig in Sand Bluff, Colorado, convinced him he wanted
to be a paleontologist, and a 30-day leave sailing with a friend's
family in the Gulf of Mexico exposed him to a totally strange sailing
vessel, a 46 foot catamaran cut from Hawaiian logs.
From his grammar school days in Raleigh, sailing had been his favorite
sport, appropriate since he had been born in August 1931 aboard
a sailing yacht off Charleston, SC. Although the bulky Hawaiian
double-hull was poorly designed, its speed led Frank to think, "What
is true for that large boat can be true for a smaller boat---a 16-foot
or a 20-foot boat would do the same thing."

Consequently, he began to draw designs based on that odd-looking
catamaran---the word is from Sri Lanka, meaning "to lash two
trees together"--- and began building the first of many experimental
boats in 1957 while attending the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill in pursuit of a degree in Geography and Geology. With
that degree in hand in 1960, he realized that the only livelihood
available through applied paleontology was teaching. A career in
the classroom had zero appeal for Frank.
The
Model of UNC
His dream of building a world-class racing catamaran
had captivating appeal, but it came to life haltingly in a heavy,
unwieldy 24-foot cabin cat constructed from plywood and fiberglass.
To generate the cash needed to keep his experiments going, he remained
at UNC after graduation working in the engineering department. His
key assignment was to construct a three-dimensional scale model
of the campus to show planners who could not read topographical
maps why some seemingly open spaces on campus were in fact undesirable
or impossible building sites.
He originally planned to build a 13-by-15-foot model capturing campus
geography with 4000 contour lines and depicting buildings with crude,
solidly painted blocks, but when administrators saw a sample section,
they insisted that the buildings be authentic recreations, complete
with windows capable of illumination from bulbs within them. By
the time he completed it in October 1961, Frank had used original
blueprints to build the miniature buildings, installed 2000 trees-including
a replica of the Davie Poplar-and lined streets and parking lots
with tiny cars. The updated model, minus the button-operated lights,
sat stage center in the rotunda of the Morehead Planetarium for
years.
During that period, Frank built his catamarans at night, first on
the second floor of the old Carrboro schoolhouse, now the Carrboro
Town Hall, then in a rented shop on South Magnum Street in Durham.
A 21-foot fiberglass-and-plywood model cut the weight of the 24-foot
cruiser in half. He also met Rhoda Blanton, dramatic arts major
at UNC, during a coffee break at the Carolina Coffee Shop, and the
subsequent marriage added a partner-for-life in boat building and
sailing.
Does
it Fly?
Responding to an announcement for a boat show to
accompany the grand opening of Tarrytown Mall in Rocky Mount, Frank
and Rhoda gambled a $100 entry fee to display an 18-foot catamaran,
believing the event offered the logical and economical opportunity
to put their idea before an expectant public. "We thought we
would surely sell something, but we didn't," Rhoda says in recounting
their stark disappointment. "People would come up to the boat
and ask, "Does it fly?" or " Where do you sit?"
"Some even thought it was an ice-boat, " Frank adds. Later,
Ed McKnight, a UNC colleague, bought the boat-show prototype.
A dozen experimental catamarans, trimarans and outriggers preceded
Frank's 1962 discovery of the "perfect" design--- a 16-foot,
275-pound, two sail catamaran with a cantilevered bow that would
sail closer into the wind than any boat he had ever piloted. Rhoda
suggested they name the craft Isotope and they gained a sale before
the first boat was built. Hallam Walker, a French professor at Duke,
invited Frank to the Duke Sailing Club to speak on catamarans and
multi-hull boats and was so impressed by the talk that he ordered
a boat that existed only in the imagination of its creator.

Evicted from the South Mangum Street shop by urban renewal enforcers,
Frank moved into a Quonset hut on the site now occupied by the Auto
Zone on Hillsborough Road in Durham and for brief period took on
as a partner Homer Athas, the brother of Chapel Hill novelist Daphne
Athas. "But Homer had the wanderlust," Frank recalls, and
he soon moved on.
Exposure at boat shows as far distant as Annapolis and Chicago and
favorable testimonials from owners shortly generated enough orders
from individual buyers and a dozen dealers to keep Frank and a small
crew busy during warm months producing Isotopes and a smaller 14-foot
version named the Cheshire Cat, both basically constructed of hand
laminated fiberglass.
"A
Virtually Handmade, Affordable, High-Tech, High Performance Boat."
Because the laws of physics give large sailboats
an advantage over smaller boats, a handicap system is necessary
if craft of different sizes are to race competitively. The United
States Sailing Association studied the Isotope's specifications
and initially gave it a Portsmouth handicap of ".82" Meaning
that the distance an Isotope would cover in 82 minutes would theoretically
take 90 minutes for a boat rated at ".90" to cover. Then
as results from races in regattas around the nation accumulated,
the USSA began to lower the rating, until it reached ".74"
the lowest rating for a 16-foot catamaran in the world to this day.
In time, the Cheshire Cat earned the lowest rating of all 14-foot
catamarans.
Last week, local sailor Debra King spoke of her experience, adding
to IFG's file of blurbs: "I have had an Isotope for nearly 10
years now. I learned to sail on an Isotope, and I think it is an
especially good boat for this area and particularly for female sailors.
It's very light weight. I can actually with another woman take it
on and off a trailer. Also, it's very, very much easier to sail;
it doesn't take nearly as much manhandling and it's much more responsive
than some of the other catamarans that you see. On a typically light-wind
day at Jordan Lake it will outdistance a Hobie just consistently,
almost with little regard to how good the sailor is."
By the late 1960s, after IFG moved to its current home on Miami
Boulevard, hundreds of Isotopes and Cheshire Cats were collecting
trophies by the scores, and all were precise copies of the original,
a factor appreciated by critic Tom Tober in Southern Boating Magazine:
"So in Isotope and Cheshire we have that rare thing---a virtually
handmade, affordable, high-tech, high-performance boat."

"When I designed my boat, " Frank says, "my goal was
not to build all kinds of boats. I was after a class boat, class
meaning something like the Thistle, the boat used to establish the
Portsmouth handicap system, which is a boat still sailing today.
That's the reason I only built two lengths, 14-foot and 16-foot."
The
Off Season - Fiberglass Fabrication
Activity at IFG has always ranged far beyond boat
building, particularly in the winter months. In 1972, managers of
the Mint Museum in Charlotte chose to end constant repair to its
emblem, a 12-foot gold-leafed plaster eagle suffering from flaking.
Chapel Hill artist and UNC art professor Dick Kinnaird brought the
eagle to IFG where he restored it and, with Frank's help, reproduced
it in fiberglass - a task requiring 37 separate molds. A few
weeks ago, Frank discovered an old mold for an original sculpture
Kinnaird had created during the period they worked on the eagle.
With a few rubs of a cleaning cloth, the mold was again in pristine
condition, unaffected by weathering more than a quarter of a century
in the undergrowth that owns the back lot of IFG.
Robert Howard, a UNC art professor whose sculptures commanded fees
of $50,000 and more in 1960s and 1970s, also worked at IFG creating
one enormous sculpture, the 24-by-13-by-10-foot Untitled 1967-1968,
that brought a price of $10,000. Last week Howard recalled that
Frank "was such a helpful person. He just helped me a lot, and
he helped my students a lot, sometimes even hiring them. He's just
an all-round great guy."
The Triangle area's most renowned artist in the medium of fiberglass,
Bob Gaston, is famous in the region for the Pig in the Sky atop
Crook's Corner Restaurant in Chapel Hill (a replica sits in Frank's
back yard), his scattered trademark rhino heads, the dancing couple
at Pyewacket Restaurant, the angel leaning outward from the roof
of the ArtsCenter in Carrboro (as though she is unsure of her financial
standing) and sculptures at the zoo in Asheboro and other sites.
Now living in New Orleans, Bob traces his ability in fiberglass
to the days he worked with Frank, of whom he says, "There's
nobody else in the world quite like him."
By the late 1970s, IFG had sold hundreds of catamarans, 200 or so
in North Carolina, but one special Isotope was sold by a Livonia,
NY dealer to an astronaut. The astronaut was Bill Anders, who orbited
the moon aboard Apollo 8 on Christmas Eve 1968. "But," Frank
concedes, "we found out real quick that the boat business is
seasonal and if we didn't make X number of dollars during the summertime,
we didn't make it through the wintertime."

To fill out those winter months, Frank took on contract jobs from
individuals and companies, reproducing in fiberglass anything a
customer could design or describe. He made 300-500-gallon aquarium
tanks for the MarineResources Centers at Fort Fisher, Manteo
and Atlantic Beach; built 36-foot hulls for trimarans assembled
by a company in Wilmington; customized automobile
parts and complete automobile bodies; designed a prototype portable
dog kennel for the U.S. Army; devised the maroon
road signs in the Research Triangle Park and at Raleigh-Durham
Airport; molded life-raft containers which RPR Industries of Apex
delivered to the Navy, the Coast Guard and private buyers, and constructed
thousands of other unique items.
Frank
& Rhoda - Sailing Champions
As sailors, Frank and Rhoda have shelves of trophies won racing
the Isotope and the Cheshire Cat. Each year the Carolina
Sailing Club sponsors the North Carolina Governor's Cup Regatta
at Kerr Lake, one of the largest and oldest inland-water regattas
in the United States. This regatta is held each year in June and
attended by many sailors seeking the most prized trophy in North
Carolina Sailing. This is a trophy won many times by the Isotope
Class and by Frank Meldau at the tiller on two occasions. As past
commodores of the sailing club, Frank and Rhoda have sponsored the
Isotope National Championship each year since 1975.
The sailboat market reached a peak in 1982, when IFG employed 25
workers at a plant between Raleigh and Durham. At that time IFG
was building Isotopes, Cheshires, and a novelty boat called the
Wingsailer. Fiberglass boats are forever and used boats on the market
cut into sales of new boats in a declining market.

As general manager of IFG, Rhoda is steering efforts to increase
the output of Frank's cats. IFG sold rights to an Indonesian firm
to build and sell the boat in that region of the world. Rhoda is
advertising in the Commerce News Daily, a publication subscribed
to by all embassies in the United States, She hopes to build and
international market for the cats. If successful, she and Frank
will accompany shipments overseas and assist in organizing sailing
socials and regattas.
Another ambition is to lure the Leeds Mitchell Perpetual Trophy
from Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, to either New Bern or Oriental.
For 30 years, Leeds Mitchell has sponsored the North American Solo
Championship, an international event which 10 champion sailors from
Canada, the United States, Mexico and the Atlantic islands race
identical boats. " It would be a wonderful for the sport of
sailing in North Carolina, and by the way, many people still don't
view sailboat racing as a competitive sport," she says.
Most promising of all, the Isotope may have a future in the Olympic
games, either directly or indirectly. The fast Isotope is now an
ideal training vessel to prepare for sailing the Olympic class catamaran,
the 20-foot Tornado, and should the Olympic committee decide to
add single-handed catamaran competition to the two-man Tornado competition,
the Isotope is the logical selection.
Dr. J. B. Hadler, professor of naval architecture and dean of the
Webb Institute on Long Island, owns an Isotope and a Tornado. He
is using the isotope to teach his grandchildren to sail. They may
be gaining an inside track on the New Millennium Olympics.

Postscript
- January 2001
This article was written a few years ago by a local
writer Jim Vickers of Chapel Hill. Because time has passed, I felt
that some items needed to be updated. Wallace and Brenda Kuralt
no longer operate the Intimate Bookshop chain. Tom Kregel and Lance
Walker, artist friends of Frank and Rhoda have beautifully and exactingly
restored the scale model of the University of North Carolina campus.
Dick Kinnaird and Bob Howard have retired from UNC and Bob Gaston
is doing float sculptures for the Mardi Gras.
IFG has in recent years worked with Clearscapes of Raleigh to accomplish
an impressive light sculpture for a major
hotel in Istanbul, Turkey and additional signage for Universal
Printing in the RTP. IFG has also been the major supplier for
Terex-American for crane cabs and for Penn
Compression for power station hoods and duct supports. IFG has had
some success with these custom projects; however, the cats have
always been the center of Frank's business.
When Frank first started with the Isotope it was very hard to overcome
the monohull sailors' prejudice against cats. The one point most
harped on was the cats inability to head into the wind. The Isotope
goes to weather at 35% and has a perfectly balanced helm. These
basic design features have kept this catamaran alive after all these
years.
Beginning a business in 1964 to build multihull sailing craft with
$650 was possible only for dreamers and doers, who had persistence
as a middle name and a true love for catamaran sailing. The Isotope
and Cheshire Cat have always been the reason and Frank's love of
the business... But not the money.
What does the future hold for multihull sailing? The question is
what does the future hold for sailing as a sport and recreation.
Catamarans are now a part of the sailing scene---a respected part!
Everyone, who loves sailing as a participant or with just shore
perspective, needs to in some small way encourage sailing and support
their local sailing clubs. Sailing is a metaphysical experience
that must be kept available for discovery by a modern society.
Postscript
- November 2001
IFG
has been very busy since the last update, holding the 25th
Isotope Nationals, attending boat shows and regattas, etc. In
addition, IFG assisted Channelmaster in dish prototype work used
for testing and marketing in September/October.
Postscript - October 2005 - "The Move To New Bern"
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