Rob Gates
New Member
Lately there's been a bit of a stir concerning the relative merits of solid planking vs. plywood for a clinker boat. I wonder if passions run similarly high when cedar strip hits the water?
Some might see cedar strip as having usurped the traditional plank-on-frame, copper-fastened and oakum-caulked carvel hull - albeit somewhat Lego-like by comparison.
As Adrian Morgan says of plywood, so cedar strip also looks a little strange (to me anyway) when finished with a clear coating; I'd want to cover up all those abrupt changes in grain and colour using something opaque.
Nonetheless, I see cedar strip as just another good method for engineering a boat and, more than that, keeping the whole wooden boat scene alive and relevant. I do wonder how long cedar strip and epoxy will last - perhaps some owners of early cedar strip boats can comment on that? And how easy is it to repair? Since the (strip) planks are joined edge to edge by convexities fitting inside concavities it must be virtually impossible to replace small areas of planking - would a damaged hull be a write-off? But it's supposed to be a pretty durable recipe. (One designer told me the epoxy was strong enough by itself to hold the lead keel, without bolts, and maybe he was right but they fitted bolts anyway).
The older I get the more I think buoyancy is the thing, however it's constructed. Crikey, these days I get a lift even boarding a pontoon and the ruddy thing's built of polystyrene!
Some might see cedar strip as having usurped the traditional plank-on-frame, copper-fastened and oakum-caulked carvel hull - albeit somewhat Lego-like by comparison.
As Adrian Morgan says of plywood, so cedar strip also looks a little strange (to me anyway) when finished with a clear coating; I'd want to cover up all those abrupt changes in grain and colour using something opaque.
Nonetheless, I see cedar strip as just another good method for engineering a boat and, more than that, keeping the whole wooden boat scene alive and relevant. I do wonder how long cedar strip and epoxy will last - perhaps some owners of early cedar strip boats can comment on that? And how easy is it to repair? Since the (strip) planks are joined edge to edge by convexities fitting inside concavities it must be virtually impossible to replace small areas of planking - would a damaged hull be a write-off? But it's supposed to be a pretty durable recipe. (One designer told me the epoxy was strong enough by itself to hold the lead keel, without bolts, and maybe he was right but they fitted bolts anyway).
The older I get the more I think buoyancy is the thing, however it's constructed. Crikey, these days I get a lift even boarding a pontoon and the ruddy thing's built of polystyrene!