Engineering:Worm shoe
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File:Close up view of worm shoe, false keel, keel and hull planking looking aft toward stern, port side. - Schooner "Lettie G. Howard", South Street Seaport Museum, New York, New HAER NY,31-NEYO,177-45.tif A worm shoe is a strip of wood such as oak or pine which is fixed to the keel of a wooden boat to protect it from shipworms. The wood is sacrificed to the worms while the main structure is kept separate and safe using a layer of tar paper or creosoted felt, which the worms will not penetrate.[1][2][3]
References
- ↑ David MacLean (1977), Hauling Out and Winterizing, p. 99, ISBN 0830669442
- ↑ Wooden Hull, Salzwasser-Verlag, 2011, p. 30, ISBN 978-3861959298
- ↑ Roger C. Smith (2000), The Maritime Heritage of the Cayman Islands, p. 130, ISBN 0813017734
External links
- Putting the Worm Shoe on the Keel Bottom — demonstration by a boat-builder
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worm shoe.
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