Options
Annie has been giving us an ongoing demonstration of just how long it takes to install the interior items into a hull - measure, make templates and patterns, cut, offer up, scribe, trim, add framing, resin coat and glue in. The method of building the interior first from CNC-cut interlocking pieces has to be much faster, and actually, building the hull is the quicker and easier part of building a boat, whether it's done before or after the interior, and whether it's being done by a first-time amateur or by a fully experienced professional. I'm now fully convinced that doing the hull skin afterwards is the quicker way to complete a plywood boat.
But now I'm getting close to adding those hull panels, and it's worth reviewing how these might be put on.
It would be quite feasible to do as we did with Annie's SibLim, and notch the corners of the bulkheads, add chine logs, fair them in and then apply the hull panels one 8 x 4ft sheet of plywood at a time - not CNC cutting, but offering up the plywood sheet, drawing around the perimeter, cutting out, and making scarphs or butt joints in situ. This would be slower, but would save some CNC-cutting expense, and would avoid having to handle very long assembled hull panels.
It's also quite feasible to make up the full length of the hull panels and add them - provided that there is enough manpower available to handle them and manage the gluing process. RM do it this way. The longitudinal joints are done by stitching, filleting and glass taping, but the joins to the bulkheads can be done either with filleting and taping or with traditional framing and gluing.
But it seems to me that there may be an intermediate option. The hull panels of the SibLim 7 are made from three pieces (four in the case of the bottom panel and bow transom). The forward join is in an area of the hull where there is conical twist as well as more curvature, whereas the after join is in an area where there is no twist and very little curvature. Whether they are made with a scarph, puzzle joint or butt block, it is difficult to make that forward join in situ, but much easier to make the after join in situ. So there is an argument for joining the forward and middle sections of the middle hull panels and topsides flat on the floor, assembling them onto the prebuilt interior, then adding the after sections in situ. And in the specific case of these after joins on the SibLim 7, puzzle joints and scarphs don't seem to offer any advantages, and, hidden as they are inside lockers, butt blocks would be the quicker and easier way to go with no disadvantages.
Any comments?