From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A deck is a permanent covering over a
compartment or a hull[1] of a ship. On a boat or ship, the
primary deck is the horizontal structure which forms the 'roof' for
the hull, which both strengthens the hull and serves as the primary
working surface. Vessels often have more than one level both within
the hull and in the superstructure above the primary deck which are
similar to the floors of a multi-story building, and which are also
referred to as decks, as are specific compartments and decks built
over specific areas of the superstructure. (Decks for some purposes
have specific names; see
below.)
The deck of the
Falls of Clyde is iron; a center
strip is planked with wood as a sort of walkway. As is typical for
a late-19th-century vessel, several deckhouses may be seen.
Structure
The purpose of the primary deck is structural, and only
secondarily to provide weather-tightness, and to support people and
equipment. The deck serves as the lid to the complex box girder
which is the hull. It resists tension, compression, and racking
forces. The deck's scantling is usually the same as the topsides, or might be heavier
if the deck is expected to carry heavier loads (for example a container ship).
The deck will be reinforced around deck fittings such as the capstan,
cleats, or
bollards.
On ships with more than one level, deck refers to the level
itself. The actual floor surface is called the sole, while the term
floor refers to a structural member tying the ships frames or ribs
together over the keel. In modern ships, the interior decks are
usually numbered from the primary deck, which is #1, downward and
upward. So the first deck below the primary deck will be #2, and
the first above the primary deck will be #A2 or #S2 (for "Above" or
"Superstructure"). However, ships may also call decks by common
names, or (especially on cruise ships) may invent fanciful and
romantic names for a specific deck or area of that specific ship,
such as the Lido deck of the Princess Cruises' Love
Boat.
Equipment mounted on deck, such as the ship's wheel, binnacle, fife rails, and so
forth, may be collectively referred to as deck furniture. Weather
decks in western designs evolved from having structures fore and
aft (forecastles and
cabins) to mostly
clear, then in the 19th century pilothouses and deckhouses began to
appear, eventually developing into the superstructure of modern
ships. Eastern designs developed earlier, with efficient middle
decks and minimalist fore and aft cabin structures across a range
of designs.
Common
names for decks
Weather deck of the Swedish 17th century warship
Vasa looking aft
toward the sterncastle.
In vessels having more than one deck there are various naming
conventions, numerically, alphabetically, etc. However, there are
also a variety of common historical names and types of decks:
- Berth deck: (Naval) A deck next below
the gun deck, where the hammocks of the crew are swung.
- Boat deck: Especially on ships with sponsons, the deck area where
lifeboats or the ship's gig are stored.
- Boiler deck: (River Steamers) The deck on
which the boilers are
placed.
- Bridge deck: (a) The deck area including the
helm and navigation station, and where the
Officer
of the Deck will be found, also known as the
conn (b) An athwartships structure at the forward
end of the cockpit with a deck, often somewhat
lower than the primary deck, to prevent a pooping wave from entering through the companionway. May
also refer to the deck of a bridge.
- Flight
deck: (Naval) A deck from which aircraft take
off or land.
- Flush
deck: Any continuous, unbroken deck from stem to
stern.
- Gun
deck: (Naval) a deck below the spar deck, on which the ship's guns
are carried. If there are two gun decks, the upper one is called
the main deck, the lower, the lower gun deck.
- Half-deck: That portion of the deck next below
the spar deck which is between the mainmast and the cabin.
- Helo deck: Usually located near the stern and
always kept clear of obstacles hazardous to a helicopter landing.
- Hurricane deck: (River Steamers, etc.), the
upper deck, usually a light deck, erected above the frame of the
hull (deriving its name from the wind that always seemed to blow on
the deck).[2]
- Lido deck: Open area, typically at or near the
stern of a passenger ship, housing the main outdoor swimming pool
and sunbathing area.
- Lower deck: (a) the deck immediately over the
hold, orig. only of a ship with two decks.[3] (b)
synonym for berth deck.
- Main deck: The principal deck of a vessel; in
some ships the highest deck of the hull, usually but not always the
weather deck; in sailing warships often a deck under the upper
deck.
- 01 level is the term used in naval services to
refer to the deck above the main deck. The next higher decks are
referred to in increasing the number to the 02 level, the 03 level,
and so on. Although these are formally called decks, they are
usually referred to as levels, because they are usually incomplete
decks that span from stem to stern and to athwartships.
- Middle or Waist deck The upper deck amidships,
the working area of the deck.
- Orlop deck: The deck or part of a
deck where the cables are
stowed, usually below the water line. It is the lowest deck in a
ship. [4]
- Poop
deck: The deck forming the roof of a poop or poop
cabin, built on the upper deck and extending from the mizzenmast aft.
- Promenade deck: A "wrap-around
porch" found on passenger ships and riverboats encircling the superstructure.
This can have open railings or be enclosed in glass, or a
combination. Often the entire level where this is located is
referred to as the Promenade Deck.
- Quarter-deck: (a) The part of the upper deck
abaft the mainmast, including
the poop deck when there is one. Usually reserved for ship's
officers, guests, and passengers. (b) (Naval) The area to which
a gangway for officers and diplomatic guests to board the vessel
leads. Also any entry point for personnel.
- Side-deck: The upper deck outboard of any structures
such as a coachroof or doghouse, also called a breezeway
- Spar deck: (a) Same as the upper deck. (b)
Sometimes a light deck fitted over the upper deck.
- Sweep deck: (Naval) The aftmost deck
on a minesweeper, set close to the
waterline for ease in launch and recovery of equipment.
- Tween
deck: the storage space between the hold and the main
deck, often retractable.
- Upper deck: The highest deck of the hull,
extending from stem to stern.
- Weather deck: (a) Any deck exposed to the
outside. (b) The windward side decks. [5]
- Well
deck: (Naval) A hangar like deck located at
the water line in the stern of some amphibious assault ships. By
taking on water the ship can lower the stern flooding the well deck
and allowing boats and amphibious landing craft to dock within the
ship.
Construction
Methods in
wood
A traditional wood deck would
consist of planks laid fore and aft over beams and along carlins, the seams of which are caulked and paid with
tar. A yacht or other fancy boat might then
have the deck canvased, with the fabric laid down in a thick layer of paint or sealant, and additional
coats painted over. The wash or apron boards form the joint between
the deck planking and that of the topsides, and are caulked
similarly.
Modern "constructed decks" are used primarily on fiberglass, composite,
and cold-molded hulls. The under structure of beams and carlins is
the same as above. The decking itself is usually multiple layers of
marine-grade plywood,
covered over with layers of fibreglass in a plastic resin such as
epoxy or polyester overlapped onto the topsides of the hull.
Methods in
metal
Generally speaking, the method outlined for "constructed decks"
is most similar to metal decks.
The deck plating is laid over metal beams and
carlins and tacked temporarily in place. The difficulty in metal
construction is avoiding distortion of the plate while welding due to the high heat involved in the process. Welds
are usually double pass, meaning each seam is welded twice, a time
consuming process which may take longer than building the wood
deck. But welds result in a waterproof deck which is strong and
easily repairable. The deck structure is welded to the hull, making
it structurally a single unit.
Because a metal deck, painted to reduce corrosion, can be quite slippery, pick up
heat from the sun, and be quite loud
to work on, a layer of wood decking or thick non-skid paint is
often applied to its surface.
Methods in
fiberglass
The process for building a deck in fiberglass is the same as for
building a hull: a female mould is built, a layer of gel coat is sprayed in, then layers of
fiberglass in resin are built up to the required deck thickness (if
the deck has a core, the outer skin layers
of fiberglass and resin are laid, then the core material, and
finally the inner skin layers.) The deck is removed from the mould
and usually mechanically fastened to the hull.
Fiberglass decks are quite slick with their mirror-smooth
surfaces, so a non-skid texture is often moulded into their
surface, or non-skid pads glued down in working areas.
Rules of thumb
to determine the deck scantlings
The thickness of the decking affects how strong the hull is, and
is directly related to how thick the skin of the hull itself is,
which is of course related to how large the vessel is, the kind of
work it is expected to do, and the kind of weather it may
reasonably be expected to endure. While a Naval Engineer or
Architect may have precise methods of determining what the
scantlings should be, traditional builders used previous
experiences and simpler rules-of-thumb to determine how thick the
deck should be built.
The numbers derived by these formulae gives a rough number for
determining the average thickness of materials based on some crude
hull measurements. Below the waterline the thickness should be
approximately 115% of the result, while upper topsides and decks
might be reduced to 85% of the result.
- In wood – For plank thickness in inches, LOA (Length OverAll)
and Beam are measured in feet. For plank thickness in mm, LOA and
Beam are measured in meters.
- Plank thickness in inches =

- Plank thickness in mm =
![[\sqrt{LOA\cdot 3.28}+(Beam\cdot 3.28)\cdot 1.58]](http://images-mediawiki-sites.thefullwiki.org/06/6/1/6/7583542810512816.png)
- In fiberglass – For skin thickness in inches, LWL (Length
WaterLine) is in feet. For skin thickness in mm, LWL is in meters.
- Skin thickness (inches) =

- Skin thickness (mm) =

- In fiberglass sandwich – First determine the skin thickness as
single skin, then multiply by modifiers for inner skin, outer skin,
and core thicknesses. Cored decks might be modified even thicker,
2.6–2.7, to increase stiffness.
- Inner skin modifier = 0.3
- Outer skin modifier = 0.4
- Core modifier = 2.2
[6]
Glossary
A brief glossary
- athwartships – perpendicular to fore and aft.
- beam – a timber similar in use to a floor joist, which runs
from one side of the hull to the other athwartships.
- carlin – similar to a beam, except running in a fore and aft
direction.
- caulk – to make water-tight by driving caulking (usually loose
cotton fibers) into a seam, followed by a coarser fiber material
such as oakum.
- core – in fibreglass construction, a layer between fiberglass
skins, made of foam, end grain balsa, or other strengthening
material to increase the stiffness of the deck.
- fore and aft – parallel to a line from the stem to the
stern.
- gel coat – a heavily pigmented layer of plastic resin.
- oakum – loosely twisted hemp
or jute or other crude fibre,
sometimes treated with creosote or tar before use.
- pay – to pour into or fill up a seam so it is level with the
top of the plank.
- plating – sheets of metal, generally simple flat pieces but may
be formed into complex curvatures.
- pooping wave – A wave which comes over the stern and onto the
deck.
- scantling – the critical dimensions of any element of the ship;
so for the skin and deck of the hull it would be the thickness (of
the planks, fibreglass layup, hull plating, etc.)
- seam – the space between two planks.
- stem – The timber at the front of the hull.
- stern – back end of the hull
- topsides – the upper surfaces of the hull from the waterline to
the deck.
Notes
- ^
Edwards, Fred (illustrated by Sollers, Jim); Sailing as a Second
Language: An illustrated dictionary; International Marine
Publishing Company; © 1988 Highmark Publishing Ltd.; ISBN
0-87742-965-0
- ^
Hurricane Deck
- ^
Oxford English Dictionary. Lower n.4. Mar. 2009
Online edition. Retrieved 2009-04-06.
- ^
Oxford English Dictionary. Orlop n.. Mar. 2009 Online
edition. Retrieved 2009-04-06.
- ^
Webster, Noah Ed.; Webster's Unabridged Dictionary – 1913;
Project Gutenberg(eText numbers 660–670)
- ^
Gerr, David; The Nature of Boats: Insights and esoterica for the
nautically obsessed; International Marine; © 1992
International Marine; ISBN 0-87742-289-3
References
External
links
The history of the deck in old
North European ships and languages