David Thatcher: Unless you are an experienced boat builder with some design knowledge, fiddling with an existing design can lead to problems and you are probably better off to find a design which suits your needs, goodness knows there are enough good boat designs out there. Just adding layers of fiberglass cloth either inside or outside may not necessarily provide the extra strength required, or desired in terms of design rigidity, for example normal sheathing cloth may add a little bit of strength, but there are much more sophisticated fiberglass laminates available such as double bias, and unidirectional cloth, it all depends what type of stiffening is required. The same amount of extra strength may be achieved by just going up in plywood thickness, from say 6mm to 9mm. Fiberglassing the interior of a boat can be a lot of work depending on the construction type. Generally internal fiberglassing is used as part of a designed composite hull, such as glass/cedar core/glass, or glass/foam/glass.
While I have precisely zero boat building experience I have done quite a bit of structural design, so I have a good idea of what I do not know in this particular niche, but I am competent enough to read a designer's intentions in his plans. Also, I am aware of the different types of fiberglass cloth available but I kept the detail in the initial post intentionally brief. The plan(s) I am looking hardest at using tick the 'Must Have' and many of the "Nice to Have" boxes, once I adjust for headroom.
David Thatcher: Remember also that building a boat is a great deal of work and difficult to fit in around other things in life. Look at Annie Hill's beautiful build and the time taken to achieve a quality and well constructed vessel, and I myself am currently building a 6 meter bridge-deck sailing catamaran which I am fitting in around every thing else in life. It has been a complete year from the start of the project to get the hulls finished, and I have now begun on the bridgedeck structure, which I am sure will take another year, so that is two years for a relatively simple plywood catamaran, and I am a reasonably experienced boat builder.
Since I am a cranky selfish bastard with little to no social life the time requirements of the build don't bother me. As to difficulty: Like the great sage Jeremy Clarkson says, "How hard can it be?";-)
Tony Brown: Going up a thickness in the plywood may well be a sound idea. Personally, I'd sheath the ply in glass cloth anyway (inside and out, if the design permits), irrespective of what the designer says. The rudder could be changed along the lines of Arne's suggestions with chord and end plates. Beyond that, it's almost impossible to address the structural strength questions (backbone) without knowledge of the particular design.
Yes, boat building takes time, but that shouldn't put any dedicated person off. You've just gotta keep at it!
I couldn't agree more, and thank for the tip on Arne's rudder. I will look into that.
David Webb: the general consensus among designers is that any change more than 10% up or down in the design results in a new design.
Duly noted. 10% would suffice, and initially I had coincidentally looked at precisely that but then figured "in for a penny, in for a pound" and so doubled it.
Thanks to everyone for their replies. You have all given me good info. I have some other possible design ideas I may bounce off you once I nail down the precise design I will use, and examine the full plans.