oldfrank
Well-Known Member
Good journalism is often controversial - and this certainly seems to have wound you lot up.
I still have my first boat - it's a 9'6" Landamore Lapstrake lugsail dinghy. (Glued clinker ply) My father had it built for me in 1962 - today I think I could safely describe it as bordering on the immaculate. Certainly it's needed some repair work over the years ... bit of transom let in (the solid wood died, not the ply) ... a new hog helped no end after the hidden steel screws holding in the plate casing died. One thing is for sure - the little boat is entirely in period. Frankly, I wish they'd have been able to use epoxy - everytime the glue in a seam dies and I have to dry it and gunk in epoxy under pressure to stop her leaking. Glued clinker ply can look just fine but you must stain the ply. There's been a small amount of rot here and there which has been dealt with - but it's not a problem as relatively the boat spends so little time in the water. She's always hauled out and covered up when not actually in use.
I can't see any inherent problems with glued clinker ply contruction. large numbers of East Anglian children honed their skills in Bittern dinghies - and what of National 12s of the period? I quite like the thought of a 'Rushton' canoe yawl built out of glued ply. It'll have to be glued ply; firstly weight is important in a boat likely to be carried - but much more significant, if it were traditional construction and used relatively infrequently, it'd leak .... and wet my jacksy. OF
I still have my first boat - it's a 9'6" Landamore Lapstrake lugsail dinghy. (Glued clinker ply) My father had it built for me in 1962 - today I think I could safely describe it as bordering on the immaculate. Certainly it's needed some repair work over the years ... bit of transom let in (the solid wood died, not the ply) ... a new hog helped no end after the hidden steel screws holding in the plate casing died. One thing is for sure - the little boat is entirely in period. Frankly, I wish they'd have been able to use epoxy - everytime the glue in a seam dies and I have to dry it and gunk in epoxy under pressure to stop her leaking. Glued clinker ply can look just fine but you must stain the ply. There's been a small amount of rot here and there which has been dealt with - but it's not a problem as relatively the boat spends so little time in the water. She's always hauled out and covered up when not actually in use.
I can't see any inherent problems with glued clinker ply contruction. large numbers of East Anglian children honed their skills in Bittern dinghies - and what of National 12s of the period? I quite like the thought of a 'Rushton' canoe yawl built out of glued ply. It'll have to be glued ply; firstly weight is important in a boat likely to be carried - but much more significant, if it were traditional construction and used relatively infrequently, it'd leak .... and wet my jacksy. OF