clinker built dinghy.

We built an 8 foot clinker Barrow Boat from a kit. We've had it for many years. Took a couple of weekends.

Best tender we have ever had. Tough, stable, rows well, motors well, even sails OK (standing lug) once you get used to it. Good load carrier. Heartily recommended.

http://www.barrowboats.co.uk/
 
Charles, Paul Gartside has an 8 footer that looks just about ideal:

8-ft-ply-tender-135.jpg


plus plenty of others slightly larger:

910tenderscopy.JPG


and smaller:

7clinkpram.JPG


website here:

Paul Gartside designs
 
This is a sort of indirect answer.

I built a Nutshell dinghy, now in Barrowboats range from a kit in 1991. Whilst I reckon she is "fully depreciated" - and she still looks pretty good, rows, tows and sails well and is fine with a Seagull 40+ - I think that if I were building from scratch I would splash out for the very best plywood money can buy, if doing a glued lap clinker job again, and would, on balance, go for "trad" construction.

The argument for glued lap clinker ply is light weight, and the ability to carry the dinghy on deck for long periods of time without it leaking when launched. I notice that Paul Gartside's 8 footer (glued ply clinker) weighs 50lb. My Nutshell weighs 95-odd and Gartside's 9ft 6ins and 10ft "trad" tenders are 150lbs.

I reckon 50lb is a good weight for a boat that will live on deck...
 
This is a really nice 7'6" Oughtred design we built a couple of years ago and only just got round to launching. Rows well and fits on deck of boat. Easy to build from plans. web page
 
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