Part 1 - Then and Now 
              Part 2 - Making Plans 
             
              You’ve all seen them, hanging in a museum, on  the wall of your favorite nautical antiques place or in a nautical accessories  catalog. Half of a ship’s hull fastened to a piece of wood. Ever wonder what  they were all about? Well, in the next series of articles, I will tell you  about them and give you some hints on how to make one of your own boat or of  your favorite design. 
              Half hull models  were an important design and sales tool at a time when shipbuilders didn’t have  CAD/CAM computers or drawing boards. A time when boats were built without  detailed drawings or even any drawings at all. They served as a shipbuilder’s  sales tool and then the basis for building the ship itself. Designs were  refined and passed on from shipbuilder to shipbuilder through the use of these  models. 
              
                
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                  A Miniature half hull model of the schooner America.  Progenitor of the America’s  Cup. | 
                 
               
              First, the half  thing. Ships are symmetrical (at least most were or should have been) along  their centerline. So if you knew what one half the ship looked like, the other  would be the same but a mirror image. No need to repeat yourself by carving  both sides. 
              Over the years  several types of half hull models were developed. The first was the block  model, where the entire model was carved from a single block of wood. The  second was the lift model, carved from a stack of wood layers of specific  thickness temporarily fastened together. A less often used type is the  hawks-nest model where cross-section formers were used to support fore and aft  strips of wood or stringers that defined the shape of the hull. 
              The shipbuilder  would sit down with the prospective ship owner and the proposed half hull  model. The model was a result of that shipbuilder’s cumulative experience, from  his own shipbuilding efforts as well as the others he was familiar with.  Together he and the owner-to-be would agree on the final details of the  proposed ship. In many cases a new half hull model was carved, reflecting the  final design that had been agreed upon. 
              The model itself  represented only the hull, from the sheer line to the keel. The model was also  carved to the inside of planking. In other words, the dimensions of the model  represented the size of the ship less the thickness of planking. This was done  so that measurements taken from the model represented the outside dimensions of  the ribs (actually called frames on a ship). This was important in times when  the hull planking could be as much a three to six inches thick or even more. 
              
                
                  | Large half hull of the U.S. Brig Niagara,  flagship of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry at the Battle of Lake Erie. “We have  met the enemy and they are ours!”  | 
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              With the half hull  model on hand and the deal sealed with a handshake, it was time to begin  construction. Vertical marks were made on the model, from sheer line to keel.  These represented the locations of key frames or ribs. On a block model, strips  of lead were bent to conform to the shape of the hull at one of the frame  marks. Alternately, the model was sawed in pieces along the vertical lines.  These outlines were then transferred to a flat surface, usually a wood shingle  or such and then taken to the mold loft floor. There the outline of the frame  was expanded to full size and drawn on thin wood as templates.  
              Once the  templates were made, the master shipwright would then prowl the wood yard  looking for just the right log with just the right curve. The selected piece would  then be sided – to the right thickness, and molded – to the right profile. Most  frames were assembled in two layers, with the joints staggered and the whole  thing fastened together with treenails or trunnels. Trunnels were wooden pegs  driven into holes bored in the frames. From there the frame was erected on the  keel and construction moved forward to the next frame. 
              With a lift  model, the various pieces of wood, the “lifts”, could be separated. These were  then traced around to form the basis of a “lines plan”. These lifts were scaled  to a particular dimension, i.e. a 1/2” lift might equal a foot on the full size  vessel. Frame locations were then drawn on the lines plan and the resulting  drawing used to fabricate the frames. 
              Once the ship  was finished, the half hull model was often fastened to a piece of planking and  hung on the office wall or presented to the ship owner. Today, a half hull  model with a verifiable pedigree is worth some real money. Models of clipper  ship hulls are pretty rare, as the designing and building of these ships was a  very competitive process. Often the best designers burned their models in their  office stoves so they couldn’t be copied. 
              
                
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                  Debbie Shertz, Administrative Assistant at the Upper Bay   Museum in North East,  holding a locally made half hull model. | 
                 
               
              As the practice  of naval architecture developed and became more widespread, the need for half  hull models as a design tool diminished. However, you will occasionally see a  very large half hull model of a freighter or tanker. If you look closely you  will see the outlines of the hull plating and rivet lines. These large models,  called “plating models”, were used in the era of iron and steel ships to  develop the shape and sizes of the plates used in the hulls. With the plates  marked off on the hull, the patterns were traced off on to paper and used to  develop the full size plates. 
              Now a days, half  hull models are primarily made for decoration. Numerous individuals or small  businesses carve them or mold them from resins. Stock designs are available,  especially of historic ships, America’s  Cup contenders and popular makes of sailboats. You can have a custom model made  of your boat if you like. They can be simple models of the hull only or have  the full cabin, fittings and rigging if you desire. These will be expensive,  especially so if the lines plan for your boat isn’t readily available. Current  designers, especially those who design the most popular powerboats, are  extremely reluctant to release those plans to anybody who asks. 
              In times past, I  carved half hull models for a nautical gallery in Ohio. I made several custom models and each  time I had to actually measure the boat and develop the plans. Simply measuring  the boat usually took a full day before I could even start drawing the plans.  
              However, all is  not lost. In this age of sophisticated copy machines and computers, you can  make a fairly accurate lines plans for your boat. It won’t be a museum or  architectural quality scale model but it will fairly accurately replicate your  boat, especially if you match your boat's color scheme. We’ll start that next  month. 
              continue to part 2... 
              Paul Esterle   
              Freelance Boating Writer                 
              Capt'n Pauley's Place 
              The Virtual Boatyard   
              
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