Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#20
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... ... If conventional boats with heavy, weighted keels, particularly those of heavy construction, had enough positive flotation to keep the boat afloat, there would be little room left in the cabin. Bull****. Maxprop wrote: You are correct, but I'd be interested to see the volume of flotation material needed to compensate for that displacement of water. *The volume of flotation material required to offset a given volume of water is not necessarily same.* I'm not sure what you mean, here. A cube of lead one inch per side will not necessarily float with a cube of floatation material of the same size attached. Depending upon the type of flotation material it might require more or less than a 1" cube to float the lead cube. ... Lear Siegler, the builder of O'Day boats, published a lengthy report some years ago about why larger boats don't have positive flotation. It was written from an engineering point of view and made sense to me at the time, albeit I'm no engineer. Their point was essentially what Jim C was claiming--loss of interior volume in a marketplace demanding more and more interior space. Whoa... "marketplace" and "Engineering" are usually two viewpoints in conflict. From an engineering standpoint, there is less than no reason at all why *any* boat shouldn't have positive flotation. Just fill it all up with foam. Engineers, fortunately or not, work for the same companies that also employ the marketing gurus. While their philosophies may differ radically, the two disciplines are not mutually exclusive. From a more practical standpoint of a useful cruising boat, then you (as I believe you were driving at above) all you need is a flotation volume equal to the difference between the boat's volume of material and the immersed volume needed to float that weight. I've worked out such figures for a couple of production boats and the answer is that the volume of the seat & berth cushions is pretty close to enough. If I'm interpreting you correctly, that would allow a capsized vessel to float with virtually nothing above the water level. Of course, you need a safety margin, and that volume needs to be both *secure* and also distributed in such a way that the boat floats in it's proper attitude (ie not bow pointed down, or leaned over 45 degrees) & has some stability. . . . and at least some of the boat out of the water and able to support the maximum allowable crew complement. Boston Whaler is renowned for this. ... They even explored the concept of flotation that could be inflated in crisis, but cited cost and space requirements for even this more compact system. There have been two such systems on the market, both went out of business. People won't pay enough for such a system... from a viewpoint of market analysis, a failure. From a viewpoint of somebody who wants as much safety as practical, and cares less about costs, it's a total success. I suspect it has more to do with one's desire to save his boat from sinking. I'd think a life raft would suffice if safety were the only consideration. I recall such aftermarket flotation systems, incidentally. Older Snipes occasionally used air bags. People buy cheap stuff. Why do think Wal-Mart does so well? Probably the same reason MacGregor sells lots of boats. ... So I'm not quite sure Jim is wrong. From a marketing standpoint, sure. MacGregor can only afford to offer positive floation because it's partially installed anyway by their building method... and their foam is the cheap stuff. ... Can you provide some documentation to the contrary, beyond just your opinion? Umm, show me a boat that doesn't float to start with, and I'll show you one that probably can't have positive flotation. Positive flotation probably wouldn't be offered by manufacturers voluntarily. It already is, by several. Sadler & Etap spring to mind. I wasn't aware of that. Do their boats all have pos. flotation? I don't know much about either mfr.--are they higher-end boats? ... It would most likely be the result of a government requirement (there's that nanny state again, Doug), and it would have to be applied to all boats, regardless of design. Show me where I suggested that it be mandated that all boats be required to have positive flotation. Easy there, Doug. I didn't say you did. That nanny comment was mine, and intended as a gentle elbow to the ribs. So according to your last paragraph, such a ruling might eliminate a whole class of boats. Small class racers like the Mumm 30 come to mind. Heck, the Mumm 30 would be real easy to put positive flotation in. Not much of a premium on cabin space, anyway. The last Mumm 30 on which I crewed was owned by a sailor who bitterly complained about the inability of his boat to carry adequate spares due to the limited interior volume. Then again he believed that nothing short of a dozen sails was minimal in order to be prepared for any sort of weather. When I pointed out that those extra sails add lots of weight, he poo-poo'd the idea. Of course he never finished all that well, either. The bottom line is that positive flotation is *definitely* possible... as I said, all you need is to fill the boat with foam up to the static waterline, and put your cabin floor over that. Or apply that same volume of foam to a carefully distributed set of unused voids & crannies. Or at least part of that flotation foam could be used as hull stiffening, ala Boston Whaler. My sailboat has an Airex foam core between the hull laminates. It's not particularly thick, but it does add a substantial amount of rigidity, and the builder claimed it even provided enough flotation effect that it wouldn't take a lot of additional flotation material or air bags to make the boat float in event of capsize. Not that I exactly care one way or the other. Is it desirable? Depends. If I were going to do a lot of ocean crossing, making passages along rough & rocky coasts, etc etc, I would want it. Why? If making open-water passages, what would you achieve by keeping your boat afloat. A capsized cruising sailboat a thousand miles from anywhere is a total loss, floating or not. Unless you can bail the boat out and sail it subsequently there is little value in keeping at afloat. Near shore may be another matter entirely, but along the "rocky coast" I'm not sure there would be any value either. A liferaft makes more sense to me--it will move along relatively well with the prevailing winds and currents. It will also be able to stay afloat in rough seas, where the flooded, low floating boat would simply take monstrous waves over the deck until it breaks up. Here in the Great Lakes, or on Pamlico Sound, a floating boat could be salvaged. There are tremendous advantages in a boat that just plain will not ever sink. It's possible that I would make it a high enough priority to put in myself. Do I expect anybody else to? Not really, especially the people who rave about the advantages of Wal-Mart type boats. I asked Ted Gozzard about positive flotation at Strictly Sail in Chicago a few years ago. He just laughed at me, as if I were some idiot. I asked him to elucidate, to which he responded, "See those little cat boats over there? (18' Marshall) That's what you want if you want positive flotation." I said I wasn't personally interested in positive flotation, but was asking the question hypothetically. He just laughed again and turned away. I'm not quite sure how to interpret that, but it would appear that he regarded positive flotation as a non-issue. FWIW. Max |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Google Announces Plan To Destroy All Information It Can't Index | General | |||
Bill Moyers on environment, politics and Christian fundamentalists | General | |||
Google Picks only the best Pics of sailboats! | ASA |