- A
sternpost is the
upright structural member or post at the
stern of a (generally wooden) ship or a boat, to
which are
attached the
transoms and the rearmost...
- have
featured 14 m long rudders. The world's
oldest known depiction of a
sternpost-mounted
rudder can be seen on a
pottery model of a
Chinese junk dating...
- of a ship or boat,
technically defined as the area
built up over the
sternpost,
extending upwards from the
counter rail to the taffrail. The
stern lies...
-
perpendicular member, to the
after surface of the
sternpost, or main
stern perpendicular member. When
there is no
sternpost, the
centerline axis of the
rudder stock...
- dynasty, a well kept
naval fleet was an
integral part of the military.
Sternpost-mounted
rudders started to
appear on
Chinese ship
models starting in the...
- Keel Mast Oar
Paddle Rope
Rudder Steering oar Sail Sail
components Stem
Sternpost Strake Tiller Construction Boat
building Careening Carvel built Clinker...
-
workers ****emble and
securely set up the keel, hog, stem, apron, deadwoods,
sternpost and
perhaps transom. In
normal practice, this will be the same way up...
- and stern, a flat-bottomed hull or carvel-shaped hull with no keel or
sternpost, and
solid transverse bulkheads in the
place of
structural ribs found...
-
planking or
plating which runs from the boat's
stempost (at the bows) to the
sternpost or
transom (at the rear). The
garboard strakes are the two immediately...
- {\text{Beam}}{2}}}{94}}} where:
Length is the length, in feet, from the stem to the
sternpost; Beam is the
maximum beam, in feet. The Builder's Old
Measurement formula...