Drawing building plans from an existing vessel

Steve Sanford

Well-known member
Good morning, All~

Dax Hinton recently asked me how difficult it would be to draw plans to build an existing gunning boat - specifically the sweet "Midwest Gunning Skiffs" (my term) he found recently in a museum (?).
The short answer, I suppose, is very difficult. It is usually the province of trained and licensed marine architects. On the other hand, I have done it - and I imagine there are others here on the site that have done it as well. So, I will give an overview of the process and some random thoughts. I would encourage anyone to make the attempt.
I would also encourage anyone to read all of John Garner's books. This one has a lengthy chapter on Four Canoes - that would be a good starting point for anyone approaching this task. A beamier version of one of the 4 - to be decked over - may work for Dax.

sm  1 Gardner - Building More Classic Small Craft.jpg

The example I will use is a Merrymeeting Bay Duckboat. John begins with some photos of the vessel - from various viewpoints. Note that none of the photos depict the boat in true cross section (aka section), profile (aka elevations) or from directly above (plan view).

sm 4 Merrymeeting Bay Scull Boat - Gardner p. 41 - More.....jpg

Some terms.....

Lines Plans These are the end result of lots of careful measuring and drawing. For many small craft, all the necessary information is presented on a single sheet.....

sm 2 Merrymeeting Bay Scull Boar - plans p 37 in Gardner-More.jpg


Construction Plans - But construction details are usually depicted on a separate sheet.

sm 3 Merrymeeting Bay Scull Boat - Gardner p. 40 - More.....jpg

Taking the Lines - This is the painstaking process of measuring an existing vessel - paying strict attention to level, plumb and square - even when most of the shapes are curves. Howard Chapelle spent many years taking the lines off small craft of all kinds back in his day. (Another book I recommend to all!)

Book - Chappelle cover.jpg

Here's a jig I made to help me take the lines off the TED SANFORD - a Great South Bay Scooter designed and built by Benjamin Hallock about 100 years ago.

sm TED SANFORD lines-taking.JPG

See the whole process - beginning around Gallery 13 - in my post about the TED SANFORD:
https://stevenjaysanford.com/great-south-bay-scooter/

Scantlings - These are the thickness and width of the pieces of lumber that go into a boat. Most gunning boats are built with "light scantlings" - many work boats are built to "heavy scantlings".

Sketch Plans - These are often not-to-scale conceptual drawings - either as the first step for sophisticated vessels - or as "the plans" for simpler craft. This sketch captures everything I needed to build SWEET GHERKIN.

SG Framing - small.jpg

So, if any designer - professional or dedicated amateur - wanted to draw plans based on a few oblique photographs, he or she would need to set some "hard" parameters: LOA, beam, depth, deadrise, crown - and then make lots of decisions about the actual shapes. The traditional process of hull design began with carving a half-model (Below probably not suitable for most gunning waters....), taking the lines from it, then scaling up to full-size.


KnowledgeArticles_Projects_hullmodel-08-12_1.jpg

With the advent of plywood, small-scale cardboard of thin balsa models can suffice for simpler craft.

S- Dax et al - I hope this overview has been helpful!

SJS
 
Last edited:
Back
Top