Carlson Hull program
Danm, Scotty don't get that thread started again! :-)
"Backyard Renegade" wrote in message
om...
"Brian D" wrote in message
news:Ro2Bb.270575$Dw6.918600@attbi_s02...
Scotty,
Don't be scared off. Buy some cheap 1/8" door skin and build a 1/4
scale
model. Use duct tape as your 'adhesive'.
Model my ass, that's the way I build my full size boats!
Scotty
You'll find most errors right
off. Have some fun...
Brian
"Backyard Renegade" wrote in message
m...
"Brian D" wrote in message
news:m9NAb.460002$Fm2.453789@attbi_s04...
Keep in mind that shell plate expansion (what you are doing by hand
and
with
software) is one of the more challenging parts of a hull design
program.
Even programs produced for more professional work, such as Rhino 3D
and
ProSurf, do not do a perfect job until you learn the ins and outs
and
tricks
of the trade to make it work right ...a key one being tolerance
management.
It's very easy to create an issue with tolerance stacking,
especially in
an
iterative calculation like what shell plate expansion uses. You can
nearly
always tell which designers actually built the boat they sell plans
to
or
not by how large the errors are in the panels. I've heard of errors
as
large as 5" in a 20' boat for example. Another key is management of
curve
complexity. In a developable panel, this primarily refers to the
combination of rate of change of curvature and also the tightness
(radius)
of the curves. To be accurate in such areas, the triangulation
(what
the
software is doing) either has to be very tight across the board or
vary
as
it goes. You'll find that every program is 'pretty good' to a
point,
then
once beyond that particular constraint, the accuracy drops off. Try
designing a boat with more gentle curves and see how it works out.
If
the
software allows you to define a measurement tolerance, then lean
towards
making it tighter, not looser. You can loosen the specs after you
have
a
finished panel that works, but don't do it in the calculation stage
(kind of
like not rounding off in precision until you report the final answer
with
the right number of significant digits.)
So, the bottom line is: take heart, your experience is not out of
the
ordinary. Look into the settings that Carlson makes available and
continue
to try different approaches until it all comes together.
Brian
"William R. Watt" wrote in message
...
Has anyone sucessfully built a boat out of unfolded panels from
this
hard
chine design program?
I just got my design for a 20 footer I am building back from the
engineer (who I had go over the design a one time). I designed the
boat in Carlson and was able to shape the bulkheads there. I was
thinking about expanding the panels out and building that way but the
more I read, the more I think I might just get them out the old
fashioned way.
Scotty from SmallBoats.com
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