Showing posts with label diamond bottom catboat pascagoula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diamond bottom catboat pascagoula. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Catboat Math 05 Apr 20

05 Apr 20:

There's the plan and then there's actually what happens. We have Chapelle's line drawing for a 17 foot diamond bottom catboat, and we planned to scale that plan down to 16 feet. Let's see that's .941176 smaller. So I did a bunch of measurements and scribbled all over a copy of the plans and headed out to the Carriage House to transfer those numbers onto a lofting on the Carriage House floor. But first I had to correct my highly calibrated blue tape baseline, and mark off 1 foot increments out to 16 feet. Then I used the square to find a perpendicular at each foot mark, took the steel tape to find the Feet-Inches-Eighths point, make a mark and put in a deck screw.



Somewhere along the way I remembered that I wanted to scale the beam of this boat down from 8'6" inside of plank to 8 feet outside of plank. I thought I could just reduce everything by 10 percent but instead discovered I needed to draw a new sheer line, and get those new measurements off of the new line. Fiddled with the fair curve and came up with a sheer that looks okay, pending Skipper's approval.




If Skipper is happy with it then we can pull new measurements off of the lofting at a few points to get the measurements we need for building molds and bulkheads.


Placed the rough keel batten down to start thinking about keel shape.


Log of MARGARET ROSE.

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Pascagoula Catboat MARGARET ROSE 17 Mar 20 Design Ideas

17 Mar 20:

Looked at some drawings by R.D. Pete Culler of a diamond bottom catboat, they'll be good to develop scantlings.




So she got to go to the top of the Marine Traffic Control Board.


Log of Margaret Rose

Monday, January 15, 2018

Pascagoula Catboat ROSE 15 Jan 18 Scale Model

15 Jan 18:

Scratched together a model of a 17 foot Diamond Bottom Catboat, lines taken by Chapelle in 1953 from a half model he saw at the Newport Yacht Club. The boat raced from 1880-1882. We are researching a similar 16 foot catboat that was raced around Pascagoula in the 1950s, and once we get enough information we plan to build one, gaff rigged, with a cross planked bottom. Only 2 of those frames would be used for the fore and aft bulkhead in the cockpit, the rest are just paper showing the cross sections. The cross planks would be 4-6 inches wide, and get smaller in width towards the bow. Inside the hull there would be 6 stringers running fore and aft. Cross plank builds were fast and economical, very few parts to cut, stem, keel, transom, centerboard trunk to form the spine. Put in 2 permanent bulkheads and a few temporary molds to define the beam and sheer, attach the sides, then start laying planks. Flip her right side up and put on the deck. Looks like there would be room in the cockpit for a horseshoe shaped seat.












Log of ROSE.

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Pascagoula Diamond Bottom Catboat

We are looking for any information on Diamond Bottom catboats built and raced in Pascagoula in the 1950s. Mr Olson (sp?) was one builder who worked at Mike Flecha's shipyard. We know of several that were built ROSE, VAGABOND, REBEL, DRIFTWOOD, MOONLIGHT, TROUBLE and BLACK CAT. By description the bottom was cross planked and the sheer planked lengthwise, with only 6 inches or so of sheer. Hull from cypress. Frames and spars longleaf pine. Centerboard with a barn door rudder.

Possible that this is a similar design from the 1870s, lines drawn by Chapelle in 1953 from a half model at the Newport Yacht Club.


05 Aug 17:

Chapelle's lines of the 1870s diamond bottom catboat arrived from the Smithsonian today.


Please post a note here if you have info or send us a private message on facebook Small Boat Restoration.

Cheers
Kent