-
Clinker-
built (also
known as lapstrake) is a
method of boat
building in
which the
edges of hull
planks overlap each other.
Where necessary in
larger craft...
- means.
Compared to
clinker-
built hulls,
carvel construction allowed larger ships to be
built. This is
because the
fastenings of a
clinker hull took all the...
-
Clinker bricks are partially-vitrified
bricks used in the
construction of buildings.
Clinker bricks are
produced when wet clay
bricks are
exposed to excessive...
- sail on a ketch. As a hull type, yawl may
refer to many
types of open,
clinker-
built, double-ended,
traditional working craft that
operated from the beaches...
- square-rigged sail for propulsion. Cogs were single-masted vessels, with
clinker-
built sides and a flush-planked, flat
bottom Although the name "cog" is recorded...
- from
traditional wooden boat
building methods, used in both
carvel and
clinker construction. In a
metal ship, a
strake is a
course of plating. In small...
- A yole is a
clinker-
built boat that was used for
fishing particularly in the
north of Scotland. The best
known of
these is the
Orkney Yole. They were...
- and
flexible boats, with
symmetrical ends with true keel. They were
clinker built,
which is the
overlapping of
planks riveted together. Some
might have...
-
design in the
early part of the 19th century. It is a round-bottomed
clinker-
built rowing boat that is
still very
common on the
River Thames and other...
- century, and was
widely used from
around the 12th
century on. Cogs were
clinker-
built,
generally of oak. Cogs were ****ed with a
single mast and a single...