Saturday, January 17, 2015

Bevels Bevels Bevels

Wow.

Sometimes, not often, wow is the only appropriate word. Long time readers of this blog know that I wow fairly easily, but this time is different. I really mean it.

For the last week or so, Ive been trying to figure out how to fit a new breasthook into Cabin Boys bow. His original breasthook, installed before launch, looked okay, but when it came time to finally install the inwales, I realized it was wrong. All wrong. Wrong angle in the boat, wrong angle to the inwales, and -- most surprising -- too thin.

I figured that the breasthook should be the same thickness as the inwales. This sounds reasonable, until you look more closely at the geometry. Generally speaking, the breasthook lies flat across the boat, like the cross piece in the picture below.

Breasthook lies flat across the boat; inwales slope outwards.
But the inwales follow the flare of the sheer strake. Therefore, the breasthook must be at least as thick as the diagonal running from the top corner of the inwale to the bottom corner. But its actually more complicated than that.

If you want the inwale to fit neatly into the breasthook, the outside edge of the breasthook must be slanted at the same angle as the top of the inwale.

How can this be? Does the breasthook need to be steam bent so its higher in the middle, slanting down to the inwales and strakes on each side?

Even a steam lover like me wouldnt try that. No, the traditional way to solve this problem is to make the breasthook even thicker, and then plane a crown into its top, so it is higher along the centerline, sloping down to the wales and strakes.

With all that in mind, I made a small sketch to get it clear in my mind.

Breasthook geometry
The crown in this drawing is greatly exaggerated, but illustrates the basic idea. The dotted line shows the required size of the timber needed for the breasthook. It must be thick enough to fit next to the strake (bottom right), and also for the crown (upper left).

Assuming a more reasonable crown of about 1/4", I figured I needed a piece of wood about 1 1/4" thick for my inwales.

Rather than test this theory on mahogany, I decided to cut a test breasthook out of a 2x12 hunk of Douglas Fir I had in my junk box. First task was to machine it to the correct thickness. I suppose I could have done this with a hand plane, but my new planer made the job a heck of a lot easier. Just look at the pile of shavings!

2x12 Douglas Fir planed to 1 1/4" thickness.
That was the easy part. The next question was, how to shape this hunk of wood into a piece that would tightly into Cabin Boys bow. I came up with a few wacky ideas, but was saved from a long process of trial and error fitting by an old shipwright from the UK who built and fished the last sea-going coble out of Sunderland, in 1963. Something like this, probably:

Coble - stoutly-built fishing boat from the NE coast of England
That seems like a long time ago, but he still remembered the procedure (in detail!) and was kind enough to share it with me. So following his instructions as best I could, I first laid the machined wood across the sheer strakes, right up against the stem.

Marking the shape of the strakes.
I then ran a pencil along the inside edge of the strakes, on each side. To make life easy on myself, I wrote top on the top of the timber, bottom on the bottom, and, just to be sure, port and starboard on each side. I didnt want to get confused half-way through the process!

Here are the markings on the underside:

Shape of the shear strakes near the bow
The eagle-eyed among you will see that the strakes dont run into the stem at the same angle. They took quite a beating several nasty nights on my voyage, when I cared more about getting the storm anchor down as quickly as possible more than Cabin Boys poor planking. In fact, the port side is more than a little beat up, so its not surprising that the shape is not symmetrical.

But my dirty little secret is that it was never symmetrical.  Not even when the strakes were brand new. My boatbuilding skills werent quite up to that. That is why, if you are smart, you will take your measurements from the boat, not your lofting, and not assume your flawless joinery resulted in perfect symmetry.

The next step was to cut the timber to size, making sure all the sides were perpendicular. Perpendicular sides are critical, because we will be lowering the timber into the boat, by cutting various bevels. If the sides are perpendicular, the top of the timber will be the same shape and size as the bottom, so when its lowered into the boat, the top will fit as snuggly as the bottom did.

Timber cut to size, with perpendicular sides.
To take the rest of the measurements, I needed to somehow hold the timber in exactly the right position. This required 4 hands, but I only had 2 handy, so had to cook up some sort of trick. Im sure this isnt the traditional way to do this, but it worked.

What I did was make a fairly stiff platform out of masking tape. I ran the tape as tightly as I could (without distorting the sides of the boat), and used enough to make it rather firm. Then I just laid the timber on top and taped it in place with a few extra pieces.

A bit kludgy, I know, but if you know a better way, Id love to hear it!

Platform made from masking tape
With the timber suspended firmly in place, I used a small gauge that I cut to size myself.

Gauge for marking bevels
This gauge allows you to directly mark the bevel needed to fit the timber to the flare of the sheer strake. You hold it flat against the strake, and against the back end of the timber. The length and thickness arent critical, but the width is. With the correct width, the gauge will run off the side of the timber 1/4" below the top, leaving enough wood sticking above the strake to plane your crown.

When you are done, it should look something like this, only in focus.

Timber with bevels marked
Then it was time to cut the bevels. This is not a job Id fancy doing with a hand tool, though Im sure it could be done. It was the first time Id tried to cut a bevel with my bandsaw. I tilted the table and lined up the angle by eye. This required stepping back a bit; I clamped the piece to the table so it wouldnt slide off.

Lining up bevel by eye
My ancient and inexpensive old Craftsman bandsaw was more than up to this task. Naturally, I dropped the guides before actually making the cut. (Actually, I forgot, but it worked anyway!)

After cutting the bevels on both sides, and a bevel to fit the slope of the stem, heres how it fit:

A perfect fit.
Heres another pic that shows the stem bevel:

Piece must be beveled to fit stem

Not to waste too many words on it, it fit perfectly! The bevels were exactly the right angle and the piece was about 1/4" proud of the strakes, which should be enough for the crown. No trial and error. Just a few boatbuilding tricks that probably date back 200 years.

In other words, wow!

This is about half the work of fitting a breast hook. Next time, fitting the inwales and planing the crown.


Next Episode: Inside Bevels

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