Woodworking Skills
Very often we receive email asking us how much wood working
skills are needed to build one of our boats.
The answer is simple: none because, except for a few, we do not
design wooden boats.
While most of our designs use wood or plywood as one of the
materials, the building of our boats never requires wood working
skills.
We expect the builder to be able to cut some sheets of plywood or
wooden strips according to a full size pattern or from dimensions
given on the plans. There is never any beveling, no fancy
assemblies, no need for special tools. Tolerances are wide: gaps of
3/8" (10 mm) are acceptable and these gaps, covered by fiberglass
are better than a tight joint. The fiberglass is structural.
Very few tools are needed: a jig saw and a drill are nice but all
these boats can be built with hand tools. No need for a plane,
chisels, table saw, band saw, planer, miter saw and other routers
or jointers.
We show all the required woodworking skills below:
Step one: Scribe the panels from the patterns or from the
plans.

(Pictures courtesy of J. Pikorn)
2. Use a batten to scribe a smooth curves between points

3. The only required wood working skill . . . .

The sander may be the most important tool.

This does not mean that we don't like wood: used in combination
with today's resins, fabrics and fasteners, it is a major part of
our building technique but we use wood in an essentially different
way. With modern materials easily available, it does not make sense
to limit the use of wood to old assembly techniques relying on
difficult to use glues, elaborate assemblies and outdated fastening
systems.
Plywood panels for small stitch and glue boats, plywood or strips
as a composite sandwich core may be part of the structure but our
design and engineering is fundamentally different from wooden boat
building.
Just compare the structure of our Phantoms with traditional wooden
skiffs: no wooden structural members, no stiffening battens on the
panels. Instead we use proven fiberglass boat engineering: tabbed
stringers and bulkheads, fiberglass keel and chines. Wood is a an
excellent material when used as part of a modern composite* : it is
after all a unidirectional fiber product, easily available
worldwide at a moderate price. Plywood is a composite: multi
directional layers of fibrous material bonded with modern
resins.
Some of our builders have used their wood working skills to produce
very classic looking boats with nice varnished trim, fancy breast
hooks and other great details but a smooth and fair fiberglass
finish is aesthetically very pleasant too. With our building
method, you have the choice.
In larger boats, these optional wood working skills can be used on
the cabinetry but unskilled wood workers can build these parts just
as strong and finish them with some easy to install prefabricated
moldings.
Wood working habits can be a handicap if the
builder tries to apply wood working standards to a composite boat.
Wooden boat builders working on a composite hull must change their
thinking pattern. The requirements are different: tight fitting
joints are required in wooden boat building but should never be
used in composite boat building. For example, in a composite boat,
fiberglass or stitch and glue, the edge of bulkheads and stringers
should not bear directly on the hull shell. It is the resin fillet
and fiberglass tabbing (tape) that transmits the loads to the hull.
If the load is transmitted through the edge of panel, the stress
concentration may result in failure. This is a textbook rule, not a
personal opinion.
The engineering rules for composite boat building are well
documented. This leads to another difference between wooden boats
and composite boats: wooden boats are designed using rule of thumb
scantlings but composite boats are engineered. The building may be
easier but not the design.
What if you like wooden boat building?
- You can today build a better wooden boat thanks to modern resins. Plans for wooden boats are available in the public domain but compare the cost and labor required to build such a boat with our boats.
- A wooden boat must be build from selected and expensive species of wood: these are frequently more difficult to find and more expensive than our fiberglass and resins. Some of us may feel concerned about the ecological impact of using rare woods. Our method uses wood species that are replaceable and produced as a crop.
- To build a wooden boat, you need a full array of specialized and expensive tools and the skills to use them.
- Wooden boat building is much more difficult than our methods: you must learn to loft full size from a table of offsets and correct the inaccuracies of the plans. Increasing the difficulty means that you increase the chances of making mistakes.
- The labor and time required to build a wooden boat is far superior to a composite boat: at least 5 times more, frequently 10 times more.
- The finished product will be less strong and require more maintenance than a composite hull. It will have a lower resale value.
The ideal compromise: If you love the looks of a wooden boat, a
feeling that we understand, a great compromise is to build one of
our composite hulls and finish it like a wooden boat. Because we
use wood as a component, many parts can be left with their natural
look and varnished. Epoxy resin and fiberglass are transparent.
If you still have doubts about the skills required, please look at
our tutorials: no wood working skills are required to build our
boats. Also see the description of the building methods linked to
the plans pages: Phantom, Serpentaire, Vagabond etc.
(*) Composites combine the properties of different components
to produce a material with superior characteristics. Fiberglass as
used in boats is a composite. Our stitch and glue structures are
composites, foam sandwich or strip planked hulls sheated with
structural glass are composites.
If you did not find the answer to your question, please use our
message board and we will
respond within a few hours.
Or explore the HowTo files at our technical support web site
bateau2.com



