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HMS Alert [1777] 1:48 POF by serikoff. (Two hulls: skeleton and fully rigged)

@serikoff Have a view to the position of the joints. The position of the joints depends on the length of the planks.
This is different to your sketch.
20251011_110642.jpg

Let's go over it again:

1. We have 3 planks per waist, as per the anatomy of this ship.

2. This means that the plank length is 18 cm - 28 feet.

3. We have an offset of 3 planks.

4. We need to avoid center joints.

5. We need to use the maximum length possible.

All these parameters are met in my sketch. Draw a variant that fits absolutely all the parameters. Otherwise, I can't understand why my variant is incorrect without proof and an alternative.
 
Fine. I asked because i'm primarily interested in French ships, and i have only a lot of data on them. I don't have anything comparable to British fleet in this period. Any insight is valuable.
I think it's better to do it as shown in the book. It's both correct and beautiful. As we all know, life isn't always perfect, but you should strive for the best whenever possible. That's my opinion.
 
I know that the example from Goodwin is from a deck. As far as I understood, the English used the same planking scheme also for the hull.
If a plank is ca 28feet long , than you should have a joint every 7 feet (28/4) by the 3 butt shift system. Your scheme shows every joint on less than the half of a plank. This is what I would change.
The simplest method is to use every second double frame for a joint
 
I know that the example from Goodwin is from a deck. As far as I understood, the English used the same planking scheme also for the hull.
If a plank is ca 28feet long , than you should have a joint every 7 feet (28/4) by the 3 butt shift system. Your scheme shows every joint on less than the half of a plank. This is what I would change.
The simplest method is to use every second double frame for a joint
I agree, but only partially! On large ships with many joints, this works, but! On small ships, joints shouldn't be in the middle! This makes the ship more fragile. And it's necessary to use the longest possible planks wherever possible. It's impossible to follow all five of these points with a different layout. This has already been tested. If you move the joint further toward the center, you'll end up with four planks instead of three, which contradicts the point about using the longest possible planks and not joining them in the center. That's precisely why I don't have joints in the center and all five points are met. You have the right to do whatever you see fit on your model, but please don't call my design incorrect, as there's no direct evidence to support it, and I've provided my arguments. Thank you very much for the discussion.

Try drawing the diagram at actual size with all the joints, and you'll see that it's impossible to meet all the requirements if the joints are closer to the center. I understand your point. I built the Victory, where it works. But on small ships, things are a little different.

From this we can conclude that the joint location (28/4 = 7) is not an absolute constant. It only works where there are many joints and many planks in the waist. This doesn't work on small ships. So they tried to place the joints front and back to avoid making the ship more fragile.
 
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