The arguments advanced against the use of tree-nails are, that they are weak, (iron being eleven times, and copper six times, the strength of oak,) that they are subject to early decay, and by capillary attraction, water passes through them to the injury of the ships.
Mr. Mackonochie in the year 1803, in the prospectus before alluded to, strongly reprobates their use.
Notwithstanding the objections made to them, all the European(*) nations
apply tree-nails, particularly in the bottoms of their ships, in a greater
or less proportion; and when cut from good timber and properly dried,
they have been found to be very durable.
In order to facilitate their seasoning, it was the practice in the early part
of the eigthteenth century, to boil them in salt water, but it is a custom
not to be recommended, as it will weaken the fibres in the wood.
If tree-nails be properly seasoned and then driven tight, they seldom
leak, as moisture will increase their bulk, and the compression of the
fibres prevent the introduction of water into the ships.
[p 73] Under all circumstances, it appears that the present method of
fastening ships generally with though, wellseasoned tree-nails, with their
ends split and caulked after being driven, and securing the butts of each
plank with copper bolts well clenched, is liable to fewer objections, and
more conductive to the durability of the timber, than any other which has
been tried, or proposed to be substituted.
*) The Dutch, during the seventeenth, and in the early period of the eigthteenth century, imported their tree-nails from Ireland.
The oak grown in that country, being though and strong, was found to be
best for the purpose.
Transcribed by
Lars Bruzelius
Sjöhistoriska Samfundet | The Maritime History Virtual Archives |
Shipbuilding |
Fastenings.
Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.
. . .
Footnotes:
Back
John Knowles: An Inquiry into the Means Which Have been Taken
to Preserve the British Navy from the Earliest Period to the
Present Time, Particulary from that Species of Decay, now
Denominated Dry-Rot.
Winchester and Varnham, London, 1821. 4to, 19x12.5 cm,
xvi, viii, 164 pp.