I am not a professional boatbuilder. I am a carpenter and joiner but because I know a little about wooden boats I sometimes end up doing some not too advanced repairs for customers.
Now I am replacing the keel, stem knee and garboards on this 19 footer. Probably built in the 1950-ies it has spent most of it's life in a boat shed with earthen floor into which the keel sank and rotted out. The old T-shaped keel was hewn out of one piece. In order to get the garboards in I made the new keel in two pieces. The inner keel in already in place.
I run into a problem today. I make the garboards in two halves. So that I can fit them properly into the stem rebates and into the old "geralds" of the plank above. The plan was to scarph the two garboard halves together in the middle once they are both fitted. What I did not think of as I was planning was that in order to seat the hood end properly in the rabbet and under the "gerald" the plank needs a bit of persuation with a rubber mallet on the midshoip end. Once I have cut the scarph there will be no end wood to strike with the mallet.
How on earth am I to assemble this without a few light blows with a mallet?....or must I use a butt joint and one of those much hated butt blocks instead of a normal scaph?
Ideas?