![]() Example of horizontal keel, sloping waterlines. From Chapman's Architectura Navalis Mercatoria, Pl LIX #3: English smack for flatfish (Fishing Vessels). |
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Drag was designed into a ship as a consequence of the hull design having greater deadrise and higher, easier bilges, a form typical of vessels such as Baltimore clippers. Ships were given drag in order to make them sit deeper aft than forward, so that the rudder would be deep enough to have the proper effect, and in order for the vessel to sail correctly and in the proper 'balance' in consideration of her hull form. Design drawings frequently made the sterns look very high and the bows very low, especially if there was a large amount of drag to the keel. On these draughts, the load waterline (which for design and construction purposes is really unimportant, once the designer has established where it needs to be) appears as an angled line to the baseline, keel and design waterlines. The 'low' end of the lwl is at the bow, while the 'high' end is at the stern.
![]() Example of horizontal waterlines, sloping keel. From Howard I. Chapelle's American Small Sailing Craft, p147: Plan of a late Isle of Shoals boat. |
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Several modern sources illustrate and/or explain wooden ship construction very clearly. These include The Shipwright's Trade by Sir Westcott Abell, Building The Wooden Fighting Ship by Dodds and Moore, any number of "The Anatomy of the Ship" series, especially The Naval Cutter ALERT, 1777 by Peter Goodwin, Plank On Frame Models, Volume I by Harold Underhill and The Built-Up Ship Model by Charles G. Davis.
While it is true that on smaller vessels, the entire frame was first assembled and then bolted together on a flat platform and then raised as a unit onto the keel, the process was somewhat different for larger vessels, especially warships. As has been stated, the slipway and the ground ways (the 'permanent' part of the ways) was constructed at an angle to the water. However, most ships, especially larger ones, were built so that the keel was level. This was accomplished by using keel blocks with wedges to level the keel when it was laid.
With the building of larger ships, all the floor timbers were first laid across the keel. Next, the first futtocks were erected on either the forward or after sides of the floor timbers (either with, or without spacer chocks) and bolted to them. Then the second futtocks were chock-bolted to the heads of the floor timbers and through-bolted to the upper sections of the first futtocks and so-on until the full frame was erected. The keelson was then placed on top and bolted to the floor timbers. Every few feet, a bolt was put all the way through the keelson, floor timber and keel. The ends of these bolts with their roves and forelocks were hidden under the false keel or shoe which was spiked on from underneath after the keel blocks had been removed just prior to launching.
When the ship was ready for launching, launching ways were built to slide on
the ground ways. The launching ways had a cradle at either end to carry the
ship. The launching ways were built 'under' the ship, while it was still up on
the blocks. To prepare for launching, the keel block wedges were carefully
split out and slowly removed until the ship settled down into the launching way
cradles, the tops of which were then temporarily spiked to the hull (if the
ship were coppered on the ways, the cradles would only be spiked to the hull
above the copper line). The remaining keel blocks were then removed and the
ship was now sitting in the launching ways, AT AN ANGLE, ready to slide. The
ground ways were greased and the wedges were knocked out from under the
launching ways, allowing the launching ways to slide down the ground ways and
put the ship in the water. When the ship hit the water, the lightly spiked-on
cradles usually tore off, but sometimes parts of them had to be removed right
after launching.
{Jim Roberts}
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