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I have made a Freeship model of the hull I am interested in.
page with file link- http://www.norcom2000.com/users/dcim...oat_makin.html -or Tiny- http://tinyurl.com/2g8h8f8 This is not the 100% final version, just a close approximation. The idea is basically a extra-wide rowboat hull with a very flat bottom. There will be a flat sealed floor set 6" above the hull bottom on frames spaced every foot. This is a inland/fla****er boat only. I would get it rated for a small motor, 5 HP I think. Not very fast, but as light & broad as the hull is, it's just not going to be safe going fast anyway. Other 14" boats seem to be running 20-30 HP regularly. 10 MPH is okay for this, I just need a motor that's "faster than rowing" while being and "less effort than rowing". ![]() One 14" commercially-made boat I found used 2mm (~.078") for the hull, I dunno what alloy. I have no idea how thick to go for the floor. I think the usual sheet the local metals supplier has on hand is 5052. ------- ,,,,Coincidentally [if you are a USA poster] I cannot find out how to rate a home-built boat for horsepower on the USCG website. I found the home-builder's handbook stuff, they go into all the math to find hull displacement and determine gear and passenger capacity and they have a table giving weights for engines of increasing sizes,,,,, but they say nothing about how to decide how much power to hang on a boat. Is there a formula for this, or is it just--you ask for as much as you want, and they make the final call? ~ |
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