by DrPR » Sun Jan 30, 2011 4:45 pm
Shiprat,
I have planked quite a few hulls, and have come to the conclusion that there is no "right" way.
However, you should start amidships and work toward the ends.
At first I tried to make everything neat and symmetric at the bow and stern where the surface curves significantly. I carefully trimmed and tapered each plank - throwing away a lot of peices that weren't just right. Even so, the results were sometimes disappointing. It took forever, and I lost interest several times with resulting long delays before it was finished.
Then I planked another hull for speed, slapping the things on as fast as I could. Later I went back and cut slivers to patch the gaps. Again, ugly.
My latest (and best) is a combination of both techniques. Most planks are tapered at bow and stern, but there are places that had to be patched where planks curved away from each other.
The only time neatness matters is if you do not intend to paint or coat the hull. One sailing ship hull was so neat above the waterline that I just varnished the wood so the pattern could be seen. Of course it isn't hard to be neat un the upper sides of the hull. The bottom was a mess and it is painted.
If you intend to coat the hull with fiberglass or some other coating, it really doesn't matter how neat you are.
Whatever you do, coat the INSIDE of the hull with epoxy, polyester or some other strong glue. This will prevent the planks from separating as the hull ages.
Shiprat,
I have planked quite a few hulls, and have come to the conclusion that there is no "right" way.
However, you should start amidships and work toward the ends.
At first I tried to make everything neat and symmetric at the bow and stern where the surface curves significantly. I carefully trimmed and tapered each plank - throwing away a lot of peices that weren't just right. Even so, the results were sometimes disappointing. It took forever, and I lost interest several times with resulting long delays before it was finished.
Then I planked another hull for speed, slapping the things on as fast as I could. Later I went back and cut slivers to patch the gaps. Again, ugly.
My latest (and best) is a combination of both techniques. Most planks are tapered at bow and stern, but there are places that had to be patched where planks curved away from each other.
The only time neatness matters is if you do not intend to paint or coat the hull. One sailing ship hull was so neat above the waterline that I just varnished the wood so the pattern could be seen. Of course it isn't hard to be neat un the upper sides of the hull. The bottom was a mess and it is painted.
If you intend to coat the hull with fiberglass or some other coating, it really doesn't matter how neat you are.
Whatever you do, coat the INSIDE of the hull with epoxy, polyester or some other strong glue. This will prevent the planks from separating as the hull ages.