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                Photos: Building the Oughtred Puffin – the full set  of pictures can be found HERE  
                  Important part – making sure all the parts  are labelled! 
                  click images to enlarge  | 
               
             
              Iain Oughtred has long had a reputation for  designing beautiful and sea-worthy boats, but amongst the home boatbuilding  fraternity, the apparent difficulties and risks of building classic clinker ply  boats have put many off attempting a build of one of his masterpieces. 
              
                
                  | Moulds, apron and transom mounted on the  building frame ready to start fairing. | 
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               About five years ago, I was already  producing kits for the stitch and tape designs of Paul Fisher, when I decided  to have a go at building one of Iain’s designs.   After a considerable amount of expensive marine plywood had been  consigned to the off-cuts box for use as kindling for the winter fire, I  decided to sit down and try to work out a way of using a plate development  programme to make up glued lapstrake kits on the CNC router. 
              
                
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                  Fairing the transom… | 
                 
               
               We started with the Feather Pram, being the  smallest boat in his catalogue, and a few days later after a lot of  experimentation on the CAD system, I marked out the planks and molds on some  very cheap plywood and MDF, and started putting it together.  As this boat was not intended to go on the  water, I used some quick setting glue, and a few hours later, the first Feather  Pram was built, proving that the basic method worked. 
              
                
                  | …and the apron. | 
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                              When I spoke to Iain about this, he was  less than impresssed, and did not really seem to believe me.  The next step was to build a real boat with  CNC cut planks and moulds.  A few days  later, it was wrapped up, strapped to the roof rack, and taken up to the Isle  of Skye for Iain to actually see it in the flesh.  Duly impressed, Iain gave me his blessing,  and since then we have created kits for more than half of his design catalogue,  with several variations along the way. 
              
                
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                  Gluing up the planking. | 
                 
               
               After an abortive start to having the kits  cut in the US in 2005, we are now cutting them in the USA again, and these kits  have already made their way to Vermont, Texas, and Washington State.  Had it not been for the recession, they would  have gone to Florida and Maryland as well, but that is the price of the bankers  folly! 
              
                
                  | and clamping while it sets. | 
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              Why Glued Lapstrake?               
              There are considerable advantages in  building in Glued Lapstrake compared to Stitch & Tape.  The first is that you will use a great deal  less epoxy than you might with S&T.   Providing that you are careful with your application of epoxy, there  will be a LOT less fairing and filling, so the working environment will be more  pleasant as well.  Without the tape to  fair, it is much easier to obtain a good finish, and when you have finished  your boat, most (but not all) people will think it is a more attractive  boat.  The downside, especially for  newbies, is that there is a higher level of woodworking skill required, but  with patience and forethought, a first timer will be able to produce a very  good result, as some of the pictures show. 
              
                
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                  The finished boat. | 
                 
               
               When we first started producing the kits, I  had thought that they would be extremely demanding in terms of the initial  setup of the building frame, but in fact, we have found that they are a great  deal more forgiving than first anticipated.   There are two cases to illustrate that point.  The first was that Feather Pram: I had  secured the bow transom at the wrong angle, and found the laps getting smaller  and smaller as I planked over the bilges.   As we came up to the sheerstrake however, the laps returned to their  correct widths, and we have a usable boat.   The second example is an Auk build, where our customer set up the molds  ½” further apart than he should have.  By  the time he realised that there was something wrong, two pairs of planks were  already glued up on the moulds, and we had to make up a plan quickly.  The scarph joints were shortened, and the  boat went together with just the sheerstrake needing a few inches of scrap ply  scarphed onto the end.  We changed the  kit documentation after that episode! 
              
                
                  Example Pictures 
                    
                  Oughtred Wee Rob Canoe  | 
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              Other Designers               
              With the word having spread that we had  successfully kitted the Oughtred designs, the phone started ringing with  requests to kit other designers boats, so we have now made up glued lapstrake  kits for Duck Trap’s Christmas Wherry and Duck Trap Wherry, the Whisstock 074,  and Paul Fisher’s 9 & 15ft Northumbrian Cobles.  We are more than happy to make up kits for  other designs, but we will only do this with the permission of the copyright  holder.  Before you ask, sadly, Phil  Bolger said “No”.  I had hoped to get  over the Pond see him this summer to try to persuade him otherwise, but his sad  passing locks this possibility away for good. 
              
                
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                  Oughtred Tirrik | 
                 
               
              So, what do you get in the kit…               
              At present, the kits consist only of the  plywood planking, and the molds over which the hull is built.  We also supply full size patterns for the  Apron and Transom which differ very slightly from Iain’s plans as we re-loft  the hull in our CAD system.  There are  notes regarding the specific kit, but for planking  the hull, there is a guide on our website.  For all the other detail, we recommend Iain’s  Clinker Plywood Boatbuilding Manual ISBN 0-937822-61-2.   
              
                
                  | Oughtred Humble Bee – awaiting Paint | 
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               You will need to supply all the other  timbers, fixings, epoxy, fittings etc.   The kits are shipped in flat pack 8x4 sheets with the parts being held  in place in the plywood sheets by tabs. 
              
                
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                  Arctic  Tern  | 
                 
               
               The kits are sold by us in the UK, and cut  in Maine using Bruynzeel BS1088 Gaboon ply.   We do care strongly about the quality of the kits, and we will happily  answer any questions you have about the them, either before you buy, or while  you are building.  If necessary, we will  call you back if you need to speak to us to clarify some point. 
              
                
                  | Oughtred Auk | 
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               If you are reading this from Australia or  New Zealand, the kits are also being cut in Australia by NISBoats. 
              
              ***** 
              Visit Alec's website at: 
                  https://jordanboats.co.uk 
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