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john24 said..UncleBob said..Achernar said..
Nice,
But what do you call the planking? Its not clinker, not (typical) carvel. Maybe carvel with something else (softwood?) added to the seams. Carvel-plus?
Could it be splined carvel?

Agree with Bob, originally carvel, it has been splined in the restoration replacing the caulking. I think with this method it is normally encapsulated in epoxy /dynel or fibreglass as there is no caulking to take up the expansion and contraction as the moisture in the timber changes.
I'd be interested in how successful this method is in bringing back to life a old carvel hull. I suppose if the encapsulation is done right, it ends up similar to a strip planked boat.
Not encapsulating, not a fan of that at all.
The soft spline takes up expansion and contraction.
there are many carvel boats splined at original build.
Here the caulking was original and 50 years let so it all needed to come out anyway.

This one was splined since new, celery top planking and no sheathing.