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Planking Timber

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After rigs and finishes timber selection must be a close third on the List Of Issues That Divide Wooden Boat Builders. American Red Oak gets a terrible press for its tendency to soak up water and fall apart overnight. Others contend that if treated properly and the end grain sealed Red Oak can last for decades. This might involve epoxy so Im glad the oak Ill use will be European.
Planking is just as contentious. Theres a web of requirements with a sweet spot in the middle: durability (rot resistance), workability (with cutting tools), strength, lightness, ability to bend and not fracture (Whats the opposite of brittle? Pliable?), low movement and high abrasion resistance are all desirable.
Cedar has been called the Boatbuilders Friend. Ill put aside the question of which cedars really are cedars for the moment. Western Red Cedar, Yellow Cedar and Port Orford Cedar (and all the other names by which they are known) are durable and much lighter than Larch, the traditional British planking, but theyre also softer. This boat will be beached, so whats durable and hard? Larry Pardey planked his boats with Teak. Fantastically durable but heavy and quite a challenge to work. Not to mention desperately expensive and politically incorrect on at least two levels.
So what will I be using?
Paul Gartside specifies Yellow Cedar or Spruce for the planking of his design #127, the sheerstrake and transom should be in mahogany. That should be the end of the discussion. Do what the designer says. But Yellow Cedar is imported from North America and Mahogany is a tropical hardwood. Its not Teak, but its not entirely uncontroversial.
Id like to use domestic timber if possible. Sadly most of our Larch now comes from Russia or Scandinavia. Thats little better than importing it from North America. Its also much heavier than the timber specified and will make a difference to the weight of what should be a small, easily handled boat.
What other choices are there? Adrian Morgan is finishing an Iain Oughtred design in Scots Pine at the moment. Our only native conifer has been so thoroughly harvested that Morgan can now trace the provenence of his timber to the Queens estate at Balmoral! Perhaps using domestic timber is asking too much?

Boatbuilders, and writers about boatbuilding, maintain that quartersawn timber is preferred. Easier said than done. I contacted a few timber merchants for small quantities of different timber. The response from Sykes was representative (but the only one written down), "The boards will be flat sawn (end grain running horizontally) – if there is a chance of some Rift/Quarter then we will include it but we cannot guarantee it." This was a bit disappointing from a yard making this offer: "If you require quality, hand selected timber, for boat interiors, exteriors or hull construction please contact us to discuss your requirements." Its understandable though, Im not about to offer them a big contract and perhaps Im being too picky.

In stark contrast was the response I got from Tristan Stone at Stones Marine Timber. It should be understood that Tristan runs a boatyard as well as a timber yard and so specialises in a few timbers imported from North America and sawn specifically for marine use. Four days after contacting him I have a selection of offcuts sitting in my front hall for testing.
I also have the benefit of his knowledge and experience. His yard maintains a fleet of clinker dinghies built of Sitka Spruce, the timber with the highest strength to weight ratio. He was very happy to talk through timber choices, where the trees are felled, which way they should be sawn and so on.

Im "testing" these in a few, subjective ways. So far Ive planed the edges and faces in both directions and planed a sloping rebate (gain or jerrold) on one end of each plank.
To be fair all five planks worked very easily with sharp tools. One look at the reversing grain on the Khaya Mahogany had my Stanley 5 1/2 champing at the bit. No tearout, no difficulties whatsoever. It was lovely to work.
In fact only one of the planks put me off. The Western Red Cedar felt indistinct under the rebate plane and I could only plane the face in one direction. No amount of honing and plane adjustment could encourage an even shaving despite the apparently straight grain of this rift sawn piece.
If I had to pick a winner so far it would be the Yellow Cedar. Very crisp to plane.
Each plank has wonderfully straight grain, is quartersawn, or in the case of the Western Red Cedar, rift swan, and clear (free of knots). These qualities are, perhaps, even more important than species when comparing how easy they are to work.
Once Ive cut them to a similar thickness Ill bang some nails in and see which splits the least.
Then I need to work out how to simulate half a century of use in a couple of months. I might just ask someone who maintains old boats.

contd in Planking Timber 2
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Planking Timber 2

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Contd from Planking Timber

I cut a piece 6" long and about 5 inches wide from each board and then resawed them to the thickness of the thinnest, the Yellow Cedar, at half an inch. The Sitka Spruce is a much narrower plank than the rest but I think I can account for that in this next stage of testing.

I wanted to find out which split the least when nailing planks together. I started by drilling pilot holes and then hammering in progressively larger nails. Its good to know that this resulted in almost no splitting and eventually I had used my biggest nails.


To get a result I then tried hammering nails in without pilot holes close to the end of the planks. I started at 20mm from the end and 20mm from the nearest edge.
Western Red Cedar was the only board to split.
Then I moved the nails further into the board and closer to the end.
Sitka Spruce and Douglas Fir went next at 10mm from the end of the board.
Yellow Cedar and Khaya Mahogany didnt split even at 5mm from the end of the board though the Yellow Cedar did produce a lot of tear out.

The Douglas Fir and Sitka Spruce seemed the easiest to hammer into and pull nails out of. Next was the Western Red Cedar and then the Yellow Cedar. However to say these were "harder" to nail into is not to say they were "hard". It was all very relaxing.
The Khaya took a bit more effort on the way in but clung on for grim death on the way out. The only nails that bent on exit left this board.

Yellow Cedar is definitely winning. I was trying not to admit to myself that I liked the idea of using Sitka Spruce. Its a very pale colour, which is my preference, and the strength to weight ratio would make a very light boat. Now that Ive done some testing Im sold on the Yellow Cedar.

When I get some Oak Ill compare it with the Khaya. Gartside shows it as an alternative choice and I can certainly get enough domestic oak to salve my conscience.

The mahogany is so good to use the thought of building the whole boat from it has crossed my mind.
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