Clinker (boat building)
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Clinker-built, also known as lapstrake-built,[1][2] is a method of boat building in which the edges of longitudinal (lengthwise-running) hull planks overlap each other. Where necessary in larger craft, shorter hull planks can be joined end to end, creating a longer hull plank (strake).[not verified in body]
The technique originated in Nordic shipbuilding, and was employed by the Anglo-Saxons, Frisians, and Scandinavians.[when?][not verified in body] It was also used in vessels known as cogs employed by the Hanseatic League.[when?][not verified in body] Carvel construction—where longitudinal hull planks abut edge to edge (instead of lapping)—supplanted clinker construction in large vessels as the demand for capacity surpassed the limits of clinker construction, such as in larger medieval transport ships (hulks).[3]
UNESCO named the Nordic clinker boat tradition to its List of Intangible Cultural Heritage on December 14, 2021, in the first approval of a joint Nordic application.[4]
Examples
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Early examples of clinker-built boats include the longships of the Viking raiders and traders,[when?] and the trading cogs of the Hanseatic League.[when?][citation needed] Modern examples of clinker-built boats that are directly descended from those of the early medieval period are seen in the traditional round-bottomed Thames skiffs, the larger (originally) cargo-carrying Norfolk wherries of England,[5] and larger English working craft like the coble.[citation needed]
History
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This section needs expansion with: source-derived description of historical elements of the period from the Newport Ship until the UNESCO announcement. You can help by adding to it. (November 2024) |
The term clinker derives from a common Germanic word[clarification needed] for clinch or clench, a word meaning “to fasten together”.[6]
The clinker technique of boat building developed in Nordic shipbuilding, in distinction from the Mediterranean mortise and tenon planking technique introduced to the provinces of the north in the wake of Roman expansion.[citation needed] While the technique originated in Nordic countries,[when?] it was clearly employed by the Anglo-Saxons and Frisians,[when?] in addition to Scandinavians.[citation needed]
Although overlapping designs may have already appeared by the 4th-century BC Hjortspring boats,[according to whom?] the oldest evidence for a clinker-built vessel, dendrochronologically dated to 190 AD, are boat fragments which were found in excavations at the site of the Nydam Boat.[7][full citation needed] The Nydam Boat itself, built c. 310-320 AD, is the oldest preserved clinker-built boat.[8]
Clinker-built ships were a trademark of Northern European navigation throughout the Middle Ages, particularly in the longships of the Viking raiders and traders, as well as the trading cogs of the Hanseatic League.[citation needed] Clinker-built vessels were constructed as far South as the Basque country; the Newport Medieval Ship is an example of a clinker-built vessel that was built in the Basque region.[9][verification needed]
The Nordic clinker boat tradition was inscribed to the UNESCO List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage on December 14, 2021, as the first joint Nordic application to the list.[4]
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Clinkered prow of the Viking Oseberg ship.[citation needed]
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Clinker-type lapped iron plating on the lower hull of the historic, record-setting SS Great Britain (launched 1845).[10][11][12]
Construction
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (November 2024) |
This section may be too technical for most readers to understand.(November 2024) |
Planking
[edit]In the clinker- (lapstrake-[1][2]) method of boat building, the edges of longitudinal hull planks overlap each other.[citation needed] Where necessary in larger craft, shorter planks can be joined end to end, creating a longer strake or hull plank.[citation needed]
How this is done is as follows.[according to whom?] In building such a boat (e.g., a simple pulling boat[clarification needed]), workers assemble and securely set up the keel,hog stem,apron, deadwoods, sternpost and perhaps transom.[citation needed][a] In normal practice, this will be the same way up as they will be in use. From the hog, the garboard, bottom, bilge, topside and sheer strakes are planked up, held together along their ‘lands’ – the areas of overlap between neighbouring strakes – by copper rivets. At the stem and, in a double-ended boat, the sternpost, geralds are formed. That is, in each case, the land of the lower strake is tapered to a feather edge at the end of the strake where it meets the stem or stern-post. This allows the end of the strake to be screwed to the apron with the outside of the planking mutually flush at that point and flush with the stem. This means that the boat's passage through the water will not tend to lift the ends of the planking away from the stem. Before the next plank is laid up, the face of the land on the lower strake is bevelled to suit the angle at which the next strake will lie in relation with it. This varies all along the land. Gripes are used to hold the new strake in position on the preceding one before the fastening is done.
Timbering or framing out
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How thes steps are done is as follows.[according to whom?] Once the shell of planking is assembled, transverse battens of oak, ash, or elm, called timbers, are steam-bent to fit the internal, concave side.[b] As the timbers are bent in, they are fastened to the shell (e.g., via copper-riveting), through the lands of the planking. Alternatively, as on many clinker-built craft, e.g. in Scandinavia and in Thames skiffs and larger working craft like the coble, sawn frames are used, assembled from floors and top timbers, joggled to fit the lands. (Sometimes the timbers in larger archaic craft were also joggled before being steamed in.)
With the timbers all fitted, longitudinal members are bent in.[citation needed] The ones that run on the underside of the thwarts are called risings.[13]: 211 [better source needed] They are fastened through the timbers. Bilge keels are often added to the outside of the land on which the boat would lie on a hard surface to stiffen it and protect it from wear. A stringer is usually fitted round the inside of each bilge to strengthen it. In a small boat, this is usually arranged to serve also as a means of retaining the bottom boards. These are removable assemblies, shaped to lie over the bottom timbers and be walked upon. They spread the stresses from the crew's weight across the bottom structure.
Longitudinals
[edit]Inboard of the sheer strake the heavier gunwale is similarly bent in along the line of the sheer. This part of the work is finished by fitting the breast hook and quarter knees. Swivel or crutch chocks are fitted as appropriate to the gunwale, the thwarts fitted down onto the rising and held in position by knees up to the gunwale and perhaps down onto the stringer. The structure of gunwale, rising, thwart and thwart knees greatly stiffens and strengthens the shell and turns it into a boat. There are several ways of fixing the rubbing strake, but, in a clinker boat, it is applied to the outside of the sheer strake.
Fittings and finishing
[edit]Fittings such as swivels or crutch plate, painter ring, stretchers, keel and stem band are fitted. In a sailing dinghy, there would be more fittings, such as fairleads, horse, shroud plates, mast step, toe straps and so on.
At stages along the way, painters will have been called in to prime the timber, particularly immediately before the timbering is done. The boatbuilder will clean up the inside of the planking and the painter will prime it and probably more, partly because it is easier that way and partly so as to put some preservative on the planking behind the timbers. Similarly, it is best to have the varnishing done after the fittings are fitted but before they are shipped. Thus, the keel band will be shaped and drilled and the screw holes drilled in the wood of keel and stem then the band will be put aside while the varnishing is done.
Fastenings
[edit]In general
[edit]The fittings of a clinker boat, as described above (keel, stem band, etc.) are fixed with screws.[citation needed] The planks of the boat may be fastened together in several ways:
- With copper or iron rivets[citation needed]—consisting of a square nail and a dish-shaped washer called a rove. The land is pierced, the nail knocked through from the outside, the rove punched on while the head is held up by a dolly (a small portable anvil, usually of cylindrical shape). The nail is cut off just proud of the rove and the cut end clenched[c] over the rove while the dolly is used to hold the nail in place. In planking up clinker work, one man can hold both dolly and clenching hammer. Although this is common where sawn frames are to be used, boats intended for steamed timbers are usually nailed but not clenched until the timbering out is complete. As timbering is a two-handed job it is more efficient to leave the clenching until help is at hand, and then the helper dollies up, whilst the builder sits inside the hull and clenches up.
- With iron nails[citation needed]—with the pointed nail ends protruding on the inside of the boat, bent over and back into the wood in the form of a hook. This technique, called clinching, used to be found in Scandinavian-built boats, but even iron nails on the lands were usually properly clenched over roves. Nails fastening timbers were sometimes turned over, particularly where removable bottom boards were to rest on the timbers. However, it was possible to tread the bottom boards onto the clenched nails and, where marks were left, gouge out recesses to accommodate the clenched nails.
- With Screws[citation needed]—which may be used for fixing the ends of the strakes to the apron and transom. In later times, they also fixed knees to the gunwale and thwarts, but, traditionally, this last would be done with a clench bolt or a large copper nail, clenched.
- With Adhesive, notably epoxy[citation needed]—where, traditionally, lands were not glued nor was anything used to bed them. The garboard was bedded onto the hog and keel and the ends of the strakes onto the stem and apron with a mixture of white lead and grease. During the world wars of the 20th century, new techniques and materials were developed by the aircraft industry. By the mid-1950s, these were well infiltrated into the boatbuilding trade. New boats in classes of racing dinghy with clinker hulls were built as glued clinker boats. The basic construction was the same as before, but they were built with decks of ply planking, and the lands were glued with no fastenings, except that the ends and garboards were still screwed to the apron and hog. Since plywood would not split, no timbers were used. Except for a light gunwale and wide rubbing strake, the longitudinals were omitted too, and a short thwart rising and knees were glued to the planking. Their decks made such boats sufficiently stiff. So that the liquid glue could be laid onto the land before the next plank was assembled onto it, the boats were built upside down.
Of the centre-line
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Where suitable metal was not available, it was possible to use treenails (pronounced trennels), fasteners like clench bolts but made of wood; instead of being clenched, they had a hardwood wedge knocked into each end to spread it, after which, the surplus was then sawn off.[citation needed] In the last few years of wooden boat construction, glue and screws took over, but until the 1950s, the keel, hog, stem, apron, deadwoods, sternpost, and perhaps transom would be fastened together by bolts set in white lead and grease.[citation needed] There are three kinds of bolt used:
- The screw bolt (i.e. threaded bolt), with its nut and washer, is by far the most common.[citation needed]
- The pin bolt or cotter bolt, instead of a thread, has a tapered hole forged through the end away from the head, into which a tapered pin or cotter is knocked. The taper is in effect a straight thread. In conjunction with a washer, this draws the bolt tight, as a nut does on a screw bolt.[citation needed]
- The clench bolt has some of the features of a rivet but is usually much longer than the normal rivet; in a wooden ship, perhaps a metre or more. For a shipwright's use, it is of copper. A head is formed by upsetting one end using a swage. It is then knocked through a hole bored through the work to be fastened, and through a washer. The head is held up with a dolly and the other end is upset over the washer in the same way as the head.[14]
Until well into the nineteenth century, this is what held the great ships of the world together, though some such bolts may have been of iron.[citation needed] Until the late 1950s, the centre-line assembly of British Admiralty twenty-five foot motor cutters were fastened in this way.[citation needed]
Clinker and carvel compared
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (May 2017) |
The Vikings used the clinker form of construction to build their longships from split wood planks. Clinker is the most common English term for this construction in both British and American English, though in American English the method is sometimes also known as lapstrake;[1][2] lapboard was used especially before the 20th century to side buildings, where the right angles of the structure lend themselves to quick assembly.[citation needed]
The smoother surface of a carvel boat gives the impression at first sight that it is hydrodynamically more efficient. The lands of the planking are not there to disturb the stream line. This distribution of relative efficiency between the two forms of construction is an illusion because for given hull strength, the clinker boat is lighter.[citation needed]
Additionally, the clinker building method as used by the Vikings created a vessel which could twist and flex relative to the line extending length of the vessel, bow to stern. This gave it an advantage in North Atlantic rollers so long as the vessel was small in overall displacement. Increasing the beam, due to the light nature of the method, did not commensurately increase the vessel's survivability under the torsional forces of rolling waves, and greater beam widths may have made the resultant vessels more vulnerable.[citation needed]
There is an upper limit to the size of clinker-built vessels, which could be and was exceeded by several orders of magnitude in later large sailing vessels incorporating carvel-built construction. Clinker building requires relatively wide planking stock compared to carvel, as carvel can employ stealers to reduce plank widths amidships, where their girth is greatest, while clinker planks, needing sufficient lap to accept their clench fastenings, must be wider in proportion to their thickness. In all other areas of construction, including framing, deck, etc., clinker is as capable as carvel. Clinker construction remains to this day a valuable method of construction for small wooden vessels.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Hog: a longitudinal piece of timber fastened directly on top of the keel; the garboard planks (those closest to the keel) are fastened to the hog.[13]: 211, 215
Apron: a curved piece of timber fastened on the inside of the stem and onto the top of the front part of the keel; sometimes similarly to the sternpost and after part of the keel. The ends of the hull planks are fastened to the apron.[13]: 211, 213 - ^ Elm species are not durable where the boat is used frequently in fresh water.[citation needed]
- ^ Some people[weasel words] pronounce this word as "clinched," an example of regional variation in boatbuilding terms.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Webb, Michael. "Clinker Boat History & Building". Wootton Bridge Industries. Archived from the original on 2008-12-02.
- ^ a b c "Lapstrake". Danenberg Boatworks. Retrieved 2020-02-13.
- ^ Lewis, Marcus & TMS Staff (2013-05-08). "Clinker and Carvel—Different Types of Planking". Boat-Building.org. Falmouth, Cornwall, England (and other): Traditional Maritime Skills (TMS). Archived from the original on 2013-05-08. Retrieved 2015-02-10.
- ^ a b Marsio, Leena & FHA Staff (2021-12-14). "Nordic Clinker Boat Tradition Inscribed to UNESCO List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage". Museovirasto.fi. Helsinki, Finland: Museovirasto (Finnish Heritage Agency (FHA). Retrieved 2024-11-17.
- ^ "Clinker Boat Building". Hobby.net.au Australia. Archived from the original on 2023-01-21. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
- ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 527.
- ^ Storgaard, Birger; Thomsen, Lone Gebauer (2003). Jørgensen, Lars (ed.). The Spoils of Victory – the north in the shadow of the Roman Empire. Nationalmuseet. p. 299.[full citation needed]
- ^ Åkesson, Per (2005) [March 1998]. "The Nydam Boats" (self-published informational archive). Nordic Underwater Archaeology. Stockholm, Sweden: Per Åkesson, and ABC-klubben.
The oak boat was the first boat found, and the only one still preserved. It has has been dendro dated to 310-320 AD. The oak boat is considered the oldest Nordic shipfind and the oldest known clinker built boat. It is 23 m long... 4 m wide, of clinker type, and built for 15 pairs of oars.
- ^ Nayling, Nigel; Jones, Toby (September 2014). "The Newport Medieval Ship, Wales, United Kingdom: The Newport Medieval Ship". International Journal of Nautical Archaeology. 43 (2): 239–278. doi:10.1111/1095-9270.12053. S2CID 108922370. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
- ^ Corlett, Ewan (2005). The Iron Ship: The Story of Brunel's SS Great Britain (2nd (revised) ed.). London, England: Conway Maritime Press. pp. 27f. ISBN 0851775497. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
- ^ Farr, Grahame (1965). McGrath, Patrick; Harris, Peter (eds.). "The Steamship Great Britain". BHA pamphlets, no. 11. Bristol, England: Bristol Branch of the Historical Association, University of Bristol. pp. 1, 6f, and passim.
- ^ Per the description of this image at Wikimedia Commons, "clinker building wasn't a common choice [for iron-hulled vessels] for long. Although strong, it required a tapered (i.e. expensive) liner to be fitted beneath each plate to fit closely to the frames." See this link.
- ^ a b c Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty (1942) [1937]. "VIII. Boats. Part I. Boat Construction and Management Under Oars". Manual of Seamanship. Vol. I. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO). Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ Zori, Davide (2007). "Nails, Rivers, and Clench Bolts: A Case for Typological Clarity". Archaeologia Islandica. 6: 32–47.
Further reading
[edit]- Greenhill, Basil (1976). Archaeology of the Boat. London, England: Adam and Charles Black Publishers Ltd. ISBN 9780713616453.[full citation needed]
- Greenhill, Basil & Morrison, John S. (1995). The Archaeology of Boats and Ships: An Introduction. London, England: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 9781557500397.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[full citation needed] - Leather, John (1990). Clinker Boatbuilding. London, England: Bloomsbury-Adlard Coles. ISBN 9780713636437.[full citation needed]
- McKee, Eric (1972). Clenched Lap or Clinker: An Appreciation of a Boatbuilding Technique. Greenwich, England: National Maritime Museum.[full citation needed]