Part One - Part Two 
            Naval  Architecture and small craft design as we know it today is a relatively new  process in human terms. By that I mean the design of boats by the use of paper  drawings and, more recently computer modelling. I do not know enough about the  detail of the history to make any definitive statements without research, but  broadly speaking I think that the last 300 years would just about cover the  span of "paper" design. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  Boatbuilding    (and presumably design) in present day Vietnam. Photo courtesy Bill Bradley  | 
                 
               
             
            Once  again in general terms, small craft design lagged behind when it came to plans  drawn on paper as the first step in producing a boat. Well into the twentieth  centuary, and in fact right up until today, small boats have been designed and  built by eye and intuition, coming together and evolving on the builder's  strongback. 
            I've got  plenty of boat designs in my own portfolio, but I've only published a few. When  I say designs, what I really mean is that I have a large number of lines  drawings and finished computer models (even some carved half-models, of which  the current computer models are a modern equivalent). Although the modelling of  a hull, calculation of the hydrodynamics, and the drawing of the lines represents  a large part of the creative side of boat design, the really time-consuming  part is the detailed drafting of the building plans. Much modern design  software deals with the detailed structural drafting semi-automatically, but I  do my drawing manually, line-by-line in a simple 2D CAD program. Effectively,  it is simply drawing in a conventional manner, but using an electronic drawing  board - at least it makes erasure much cleaner! 
            
              
                
                   
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                  This    photo shows me making the lines drawing of    Phoenix III.    These days I do it electronically.   | 
                 
               
             
            For a  number of years now I have felt uncomfortable about the number of plans being  pumped out around the world for commercial gain. I know that people are always  after something just a bit different, but in years gone by, existing designs evolved to meet the requirements of the customer rather than the market  being flooded with new designs just for the sake of having a new design. The  result was that bad elements were designed out and good elements were improved  upon, giving rise to boats which were better and better suited to their  intended function. It is with that in mind that I have been holding back on  publishing extra plans. 
            In the  last couple of weeks, I have been approached by a customer who had bought a set  of plans for my Phoenix III design, asking whether the boat could be  built using the glued-strip plank method. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  The    very first Phoenix III on launching day. Photo Rhonda Lillistone  | 
                 
               
             
            Now, I  designed Phoenix III from the very outset to have five wide planks of  plywood planking making use of the excellent glued-lapstrake building method.  My idea was to make use of the cross-grain strength of marine plywood, and to  capitalise on the width of the available material. Also, I was aware that many  people are intimidated by the thought of making a large number of planks, so I  felt that five wide planks would provide a good compromise between a rounded  lapstrake hullform and ease of building. The resulting boat has been very  sucessful, and I'm quite proud of the overall design. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  Phoenix III has several different rig options - this is the    balance lug, which sets on exactly the same mast as the sprit rig. Photo Paul    Hernes  | 
                 
               
             
            Because I  designed Phoenix III for five wide planks per side, I drew the bulkheads  and molds with a number of flats to take the individual planks. This makes it  much easier for an inexperienced builder to determine the lay of the planks and  makes spiling (the determination of the plank shape on the flat) much simpler.  The problem is that it would not allow the customer to build the boat using the  glued-strip-plank method. I was tempted to tell him to use a spline to simply  draw a curve through the points of the flats on all of the sections, but I  wasn't convinced that the resulting shape would be fair. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  A    half-section through the hull, showing how the wide planks lay against flats    on the bulkheads and molds.  | 
                 
               
             
            What I  ended up doing was to import the existing hull shape into the DELFTship  Professional which I currently use for hull modelling, and then altered the  entire hull from one with five flats per side, to one with a fully rounded,  smooth hull surface. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  Phoenix III perspective  | 
                 
               
             
            
              
                
                   
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                  Phoenix III perspective  | 
                 
               
             
            
              
                
                   
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                  Phoenix III lines plan  | 
                 
               
                         
            I have  since carried out a similar modification to my Periwinkle design, which  was drawn in the same way as Phoenix III. 
            
              
                
                   
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                  Periwinkle on launching day. Photo Paul Hernes  | 
                 
               
             
            One of  the side benefits of this process has been that I have been able to make variations  to the hull shapes where thought beneficial. In the case of Phoenix III I left her exactly as designed with the exception of making the hull smoothly  rounded. But for Periwinkle, I increased the height of thebow  very slightly and filled out the sheer line forward in plan view a little. This  was made possible because the smoothly rounded hull does not have to comply  with the limitations of developable plank shapes, which is necessary with the  five plank hullform. 
            So, here  is an example of improving (hopefully) existing designs with small, incremental  alterations carried out where experience indicates they may be beneficial. 
            Having  said all of this, I encourage anybody who feels the urge to have a go at  designing their own boat. Experience begins at the beginning!    
                                                                      
         
            
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