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boats, the rubbing strake was applied to the outside of the sheer strake. Many current pleasure craft reflect this history in that they have a mechanically attached (and therefore replaceable) rub rail at the location formerly occupied by a rubbing strake, often doubling to cover the joint between a
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steel ship, the strakes were usually lapped and joggled (one strake given projections to match indentions in the one adjoining), but where a smoother finish was sought they might be riveted on a butt strap, though this was weaker. In modern welded construction, the plates are normally butt-welded
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A "stealer" is a short strake employed to reduce the width of plank required where the girth of the hull increases or to accommodate a tuck in the shape. It is commonly employed in carvel and iron/steel shipbuilding, but very few clinker craft use them.
237:: each of the several continuous lines of planking or plates, of uniform breadth, in the side of a vessel, extending from stem to stern. Hence, the breadth of a plank used as a unit of vertical measurement of a ship's side,(late Middle English).
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sheer strake. It was much less broad but thicker than other strakes so that it projected and took any rubbing against piers or other boats when the boat was in use. In
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and reinforced with a butt block. Where the transverse sections of the vessel's shape are fuller, the strakes are wider; they taper toward the ends.
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In small boats strakes may be single continuous pieces of wood. In larger wooden vessels strakes typically comprise several planks which are either
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strake. Working upward come the bottom strakes, lowers, bilge strakes, topside strakes, and uppers also named sequentially as the
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Diagram of typical modern metal-hulled ship’s exterior plating, with a single strake highlighted in red
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strake, etc. The uppermost along the topsides is called the sheer strake. Strakes are joined to the
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with full penetration welds all round to adjoining plates within the strake and to adjoining strakes.
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The philosophy of shipbuilding : conceptual approaches to the study of wooden ships
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In boat and ship construction, strakes immediately adjacent to either side of the
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253:: one of a continuous range of planks or plates forming the side of a vessel.
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construction. In a metal ship, a strake is a course of plating.
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usually have a rubbing strake (typically a glued-on rubber
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A rubbing strake was traditionally built in just below a
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90:strakes are the two immediately adjacent to the
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42:Garboard strakes and related near-keel members
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297:United States Government Publishing Office
97:The word derives from traditional wooden
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153:. The next two are the first broad or
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320:Examples of extruded rubbing strakes
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16:Structure in watercraft construction
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249:- "Strake" (also called "streak")
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310:General wooden boat information
289:Principles of Naval Engineering
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227:-"Strake" (from Old English "
62:is a longitudinal course of
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157:strake and second broad or
70:which runs from the boat's
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247:Collins English Dictionary
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341:Oxford English Dictionary
225:Oxford English Dictionary
263:Ward, Cheryl A. (2004).
414:Apparent wind indicator
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30:A clinker-built Viking
21:Strake (disambiguation)
101:methods, used in both
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189:and its innerliner.
173:by their hood ends.
19:For other uses, see
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86:(at the rear). The
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383:sailing ship
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609:Quarterdeck
499:Daggerboard
494:Crow's nest
474:Centreboard
444:Bow or prow
394:Aftercastle
381:Parts of a
337:www.oed.com
137:Terminology
579:Orlop deck
514:Forecastle
509:Figurehead
439:Boom brake
429:Bilgeboard
191:Inflatable
679:Whipstaff
649:Sternpost
639:Starboard
589:Poop deck
584:Outrigger
399:Afterdeck
202:extrusion
151:A strakes
80:sternpost
78:) to the
699:Category
659:Taffrail
599:Porthole
569:Leeboard
544:Jackline
449:Bowsprit
419:Beakhead
251:nautical
235:nautical
230:streccan
194:dinghies
187:GRP hull
165:strake,
88:garboard
74:(at the
72:stempost
64:planking
32:longship
674:Transom
549:Jibboom
529:Gunwale
524:Gangway
484:Cockpit
464:Cathead
459:Capstan
212:Sources
182:clinker
130:riveted
119:scarfed
107:clinker
84:transom
68:plating
664:Tiller
654:Strake
619:Rudder
564:Kelson
479:Chains
404:Anchor
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178:carvel
103:carvel
60:strake
684:Winch
519:Frame
454:Cable
434:Bitts
424:Bilge
128:In a
121:, or
634:Stem
629:Skeg
594:Port
574:Mast
554:Keel
539:Hull
534:Head
504:Deck
269:ISBN
198:RIBs
196:and
171:stem
143:keel
105:and
92:keel
76:bows
58:, a
56:hull
669:Top
614:Rib
149:or
82:or
66:or
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374:e
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360:v
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167:E
163:D
159:C
155:B
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