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Introducing the Devlin "Stitch and Glue" Method
Devlin Designing Boat Builders are master craftsmen when
it comes to wooden boat construction. Our “Stitch and
Glue” method is a vastly superior approach when compared
to traditional boat assembly methods and delivers
stronger, better boats. The Devlin Method uses epoxy to
bond and seal all parts together thereby achieving a
stronger, one-piece boat design. The initial
construction is quicker, easier, and needs fewer
parts. This approach does not require expensive building
molds. More importantly, it results in a boat that is
much easier to maintain over the long term.
“Stitch and Glue” construction
is a technique using very high grade marine plywood,
simple wire sutures (to clamp together the panels of the
boat until they are fused together permanently),
fiberglass tapes, fiberglass or Dynel Polyester cloths
for sheathing, epoxy fillers, and epoxy resin. For a
simple Vee-Bottomed boat, the basic steps for the
builder are to cut out the two bottom panels, the two
side panels and the transom. These parts are then
stitched together with the wire sutures along the panel
edges or seams. The wire sutures clamp and hold the
panels together until the epoxy/fiberglass cloth fusing
mixture is cured, then the wires are removed. For this
fusing joint, the epoxy resin is thickened with the
fillers or hardwood flour (finely ground hardwood
sawdust ) and then applied to the seam in a thick,
continuous bead over which layers of fiberglass cloth
tape are applied. Each tape layer is completely
saturated with Epoxy resin before applying the next
layer (wet on wet). Once all the interior seams have
cured up (overnight), the hull is turned over, the wire
stitches (sutures or clamps) are removed and the seams
and edges are smoothed over and faired in anticipation
of sheathing the entire exterior of the hull with
fiberglass or Dynel using the epoxy resin to completely
saturate the cloth. The key to the method is that all of
the structural surfaces must be saturated with the
resin. Using marine quality materials will always ensure
a quality product.
When you purchase a set of plans, we include a
step-by-step building booklet, a materials list, a
source list, and even a list of the tools necessary for
the basic construction. One nice thing about “Stitch and
Glue” construction is that fewer tools are required
compared to other methods of construction.
“Stitch and Glue” construction allows the builder to
once again utilize the strength and beauty of wood while
eliminating the negative maintenance problems so
prevalent in the past with wooden boats.
The Advantages of "Stitch and Glue" Boat Building
The differences between conventional plywood-on-frame
and “Stitch and Glue” construction are significant. To
better understand the differences between the two,
contrast the structural dissimilarities of an early
biplane and a modern jet airliner. The biplane was made
up of frames and spars over which was stretched a thin
skin. The jet airliners structure, on the other hand, is
much
simpler, with a stressed aluminum skin rigidly
attached to bulkheads and spars to create a single monocoque unit. A boat built by attaching plywood
planking to lumber frames is most similar to the
biplane; a “Stitch and Glue” more closely resembles the
jet airliner, a homogeneous structure in which the skin
bears the primary stresses.
The basic argument for “Stitch and Glue” construction is
that it uses fewer parts and that epoxy is used to bond
and seal the parts to achieve a stronger, monocoque
(one-piece) boat. The initial construction is quicker
and easier, uses fewer parts, requires no building
molds, and all parts of the boat contribute to the
structure. And in the long term, the boat is much easier
to maintain, mostly because the structure is so very
strong and all the surfaces are carefully and completely
sealed with the same epoxy resin that was used to bond
all the parts together thus keeping moisture and water
from migrating into the dry wood. If you keep the wood
dry then paints and finishes aren’t prone to cracking
and peeling off and the wood in the structure is
mummified from the possibility of rot, which requires
considerable moisture in order to flourish.
Looking back over my own development in boatbuilding,
and considering the advantages and disadvantages of the
many forms of boat construction I've used, I find my
memory foggy as to why I chose one form over another. In
the beginning, I was simply working out the differences
and identifying the problems of each form of
construction. I knew that working with natural wood
products was appealing, and I knew I wanted to use wood
products in an ecologically sound manner. A boat built
of wood has a spirit that is easy to see and feel, but
much harder to define. “Stitch and Glue” simply
produces the strongest structure, is easiest to approach for either the experienced builder or the “first
time builder” and results in a product that the builder
can be proud of for a very, very long time!
Almost all boatbuilding methods require expensive
tooling. Production fiberglass boats have their
elaborate plugs and molds. Traditional plank-on-frame or
cold-molded wooden boats require complicated building
molds. This expensive tooling can tend to stop much of
the evolution of an individual boat design. “Stitch and
Glue” construction does not bear this initial burden.
With no building molds or tooling to consider, a “Stitch
and Glue” design has a chance to constantly evolve and
improve and that's important! I believe that any design
can use refinement, and as my own design work has
evolved, I have found ways to increase the ability of
the “Stitch and Glue” boat to even more appropriately
suit its purpose and meet its owners performance
requirements.
Lofting
In almost any boatbuilding method, the builder must
carefully draw out, in full size, what the plans of the
boat show in small scale. Much time spent on your
knees laboring over huge painted sheets of plywood
trying to accurately draw long lines is typically not my
idea of fun. I clearly remember my confusion at
the prospect of lofting my first boat. It seemed such a
waste to spend so much time on a pursuit that didn't
seem to have much to do with boat building and I quickly
realized that even the most careful approach to the task
would still result in a fairly inaccurate result.
In “Stitch and Glue” construction, several building
basics or norms of traditional boatbuilding are altered.
First, there are no building molds required and no
complicated lofting of molds or support structures are
necessary. Second, the lofting required is not to draw a
full size picture of the lines of the boat, but to draw
a full-size picture of the parts. For a simple
V-bottomed boat, the parts required for a basic hull are
two side panels, two bottom panels, and a transom, drawn
directly onto the plywood that will be cut out and used
for those parts.
In the designs that I offer for “Stitch and Glue”
construction, I have made the conversion from
three-dimension to single-dimension for you. I have
essentially “peeled the boat”, laid it out in a flat
plane, drawn a picture of it, and scaled that drawing so
it can be easily duplicated. So when you look at a
drawing of the panel projections for the boat, you are
looking at a scaled drawing of the skins or sections of
that boat.
A panel-projection drawing is scaled out so that it
fits on flat sheets of plywood, the very same ones that
we will use to build the boat. If we lay out that sheet
of plywood horizontally in front of us, the left edge or
small edge is the station baseline. All stations are
measured out from that edge parallel to each other at a
fixed interval. In our example, the station space is
12", so every 12" for the length of the panel, a
straight line is drawn perpendicular to the baseline, or
long edge. When those lines are drawn and labeled, the
actual offsets can be drawn in. The bottom long edge of
the panel is our baseline, and a tape measure can be
hooked over that edge and pulled out alongside the
station line, measured and marked.
The rule in lofting is feet, inches, eighths. If a
dimension says 1-10-4, then that translates to one foot,
ten inches, and four/eighths, or one/half inch. A
dimension that say 2-4-0 is two feet, four inches, and
zero eighths and this rule is the same for all
dimensions in the panel.
Once all the points are marked onto the plywood
panel, you can connect the dots with a long, fair batten
(a long staff of dimensional wood that can be bent
around the marks you have made on the panels) and cut
the parts out. This essentially is all the lofting
needed for you to start construction and you are free to
concentrate your energy on building the boat.
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Why Wood?
At Devlin Designing Boat Builders we know wood. We
have been using wood in the marine environment for more
than 30 years and can unequivocally say that wood is the
best choice. Read on. In an era of modern
materials such as fiberglass and aluminum, you might
wonder how we could possibly make this claim. When
compared to other alternatives, wood has many
significant advantages as a construction material for
many types of marine craft.
- Better resistance to stress - Wood is the most resistant
to constant direct force... the kind like the structure
of a boat gets due to the pressure of the water on the
hull. And the faster the boat goes, the heaver the
force is. One well-known test was done on various
materials to find out how well they hold up under
constant pressure. Each material was put under
direct pressure for 1 million cycles for 30 hours at a
time.
- Straight Fiberglass kept only 22% of original strength
- Aluminum kept 37% of original strength
- Wood with epoxy kept 64% of original strength.
- Better thermal, galvanic and acoustic characteristics -
Wood has better thermal and acoustical characteristics
than other materials so there are greatly reduced
problems with condensation on the faces of the interior
hull. Its galvanic characteristics are also ideal.
Galvanic corrosion occurs when two dissimilar materials
come in contact with each other and one causes the other
to corrode. Wood does not have this problem.
- Best aesthetics and visual experience - No one can doubt
that in terms of look and feel, you can't beat the
feeling of wood. The aesthetic characteristics of
wood and the visual experience it brings are far
superior to the synthetic experience of other types of
boats. With its warm and natural beauty, the
feeling you get when staying on board surrounded by
natural materials contributes to your joy of ownership.
- Comparable maintenance costs - Traditionally made wooden
boats typically have a high cost of maintenance. This is
not true of Devlin boats because all wooden parts of our
boats that are exposed to the sun or sea are protected
by our epoxy coating. Technically speaking,
when dry wood is protected in this manner, it maintains
all its extraordinary characteristics, practically
without aging for decades. Maintaining a Devlin boat is
no more expensive or time consuming than that of a
fiberglass boat.
When compared to other materials such
as fiberglass, aluminum, or even steel, wood is actually
stronger when you look at the relationship between its
strength and its weight. This means that a
wooden boat when compared to synthetic boats of the same
size and weight, the wooden boat will have the least
weight. It also means that when compared to other
construction materials, that same wooden boat with have
the greatest strength. Bottom Line: Wood has the greatest strength per volume of weight and
that makes it highly suitable for boat building where
the material needs to be light but strong.
Press Reviews about the "Stitch and Glue" Method
Woodenboat
January-February 2006
The Tailoring of a Stitch-and-Glue Boat by Eric Sorensen
Boatman
Issue 38
The Stitch and Glue Boats of Sam Devlin by Marty Larkin

Our Book & Video
To better understand the “Stitch and Glue” boat
building method, we have produced a Video/DVD “Wooden Boatbuilding with
Sam Devlin” and published a book “Devlin’s Boatbuilding” on the subject. These
were created to help those with the desire to build their own boat.
Click on the book or video for more information.
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