Then it was back to planking. The last planks gave me some trouble. They had some twist, due to the hull appearing to have flare at bow, and tumblehome amidships, so i used quick-setting epoxy glue, for strength. After the allotted time for curing, I removed the clamps to clean up the excess glue, only to find later on, that over the next few hours, the glue had yielded to the stress in the plank, and allowed it to move out, losing the tumblehome. Then, of course, taking the plank off damaged the one below, so it was one pace forward, two back. They went on in the end, by trying harder. The planks needed steaming, with more clamps to pull them into shape.
I used Spanish windlasses to pull the tumble home in, tho' it was probably overkill. I do like them, though, - they are powerful, easily adjustable, and cost nothing!
The next 2 full-length planks, in a contrasting colour, went on well enough, but were not exactly on top of each other where they form the guardrails ( bulwarks?) of the maindeck. I was too heavy-handed fairing them, so they ended up far too thin, and easily damaged. Another one forward, two back moment!
This photo is out of sequence, but it shows the only place where the bulkheads supplied gave an 'unfair' line to the hull, shown by the trial plank plank on the stern castle. I had to choose between builing up one frame, or trimming the one beside it, and decided that trimming was easier.