- A treenail, also
trenail, trennel, or trunnel, is a
wooden peg, pin, or
dowel used to
fasten pieces of wood together,
especially in
timber frames, covered...
- also for
making wooden butter knives. It was also
frequently used for
trenails in
wooden shipbuilding by
shipwrights for its
tough properties. In Estonia...
- the outside.
Chairs have been
fixed to the
sleeper using wooden spikes (
trenails), ****s, fang-bolts or spikes. In most of the world, flat-bottomed rail...
- clinker-built with iron nails. Ribs were
attached to the
strakes with
cords or
trenails, and
thwarts installed. The mast was then
inserted in the mast step. The...
- each yard (90 cm or 35 inches) of plank. In many
early ships treenails (
trenails, trunnels) were used to
fasten large timbers. First, a hole
about 20 mm...
- Quy Nhơn
Almost completed offs****
fishing hull, Quy Nhơn
Plank fixing,
trenails and red lead paint, Quy Nhơn
Repaired frames,
barge hull, Sa Đéc, Mekong...
-
whereby each arch was made from
multiple layers of
timbers held
together by
trenails and
supported on
stone pillars. The
viaduct was
rebuilt in iron between...
-
underwater chain-saws. The
fragments removed were
taken apart and
studied trenail by
trenail on land, then re****embled
exactly as
before and
returned to their...
- 10m or more and is
strengthened with a
substantial gunwale,
attached by
trenails. The
Somali fishermen also use
stone anchors to
prevent their ships from...
- 14
layers of 22 by 3.5
inches (559 mm × 89 mm)
timbers held
together by
trenails and
built by Messrs. Robson. A
paper on the viaducts's
design won Benjamin...