Sunday, August 21, 2011

Did I show you my knees?



Knees on a boat are a framing part that carries a load around a bend. A knee connects two parts at a right angle or nearly a right angle. On Skorpa I am using knees to connect the deck beams to the side of the boat.

The curved part of the knee that faces the inside carries a compressive load. The upper part of the knee and the deck are in tension when a load is applied. The middle of the knee is not doing too much mostly just keeping the side in compression separate from the side in tension. The holes make the knee a little lighter without detracting much from their strength. They also make a handy place to tie things. And the holes make the knees look nice. I may have gone a bit overboard drilling holes.



Knees support the side of the cabin and the cockpit coaming.


The knees in the cockpit coaming have special holes to provide wiring to the compasses and for a tiller line to run the perimeter of the cockpit.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Deck Beams

Here you can see the forward deck beams in place. The aft forward deck beam is in the background with the front of the cabin resting on it. The center forward deck beam is just forward of that and five small beams run for and aft on top of the main beams.

Here is another view.
The cabin side deck beam is visible. This piece was a little tricky to fit because it bends slightly as it comes around the side of the cabin.