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#1
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I will have to admit to an old programming axiom:
"Within every complex program there is a simple one struggling to get out." :-) -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
#2
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Glenn says:
I will have to admit to an old programming axiom: "Within every complex program there is a simple one struggling to get out." :-) I have always held that it is easier to design a complex system than a simple one that does the same thing. My father always kept a piece of card with "Simplify" writ upon it stuck to his drawing board light. And he followed his own advice. ;-) Steve |
#3
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#4
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Brian says:
Famous aero design concept: Simplicate and add lightness True, except that boatbuilders' budgets usually don't allow for that much weight reduction. Lost weight always costs about 10 times what it would have cost to leave it there. And that has been true since the dugout.... Steve |
#6
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On Sun, 22 Aug 2004 13:30:05 GMT, Brian Whatcott
wrote: Famous aero design concept: Simplicate and add lightness True, except that boatbuilders' budgets usually don't allow for that much weight reduction. Lost weight always costs about 10 times what it would have cost to leave it there. And that has been true since the dugout.... The opportunity cost of weight is different afloat, I'd think. There is a decrement in freeboard, I suppose, with its increment in skin friction: but either the operating speed is low, so the friction is modest; or the speed is high, and the excess weight is hauled out of the wash on the plane, wouldn't you think? ================================================== ========== For most cruising sailboats there is little payback in reducing weight but the designers of racing sailboats go to fanatical trouble and expense to reduce weight. The benefits are much more than reduced friction. Weight aloft causes increased heeling and pitching. Weight in the ends increases pitching. Weight anywhere decreases acceleration. Weight in the hull is better served by increased weight in the keel. |
#7
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Wayne B says:
but the designers of racing sailboats go to fanatical trouble and expense to reduce weight. That's the one I was referring to. A 40' boat weighing in at around 20,000 lbs is usually not too expensive whereas a 40-footer at 8,000 lbs begins to strain the wallet. ;-) Steve Stephen C. Baker - Yacht Designer http://members.aol.com/SailDesign/pr...cbweb/home.htm |
#8
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I keep K.I.S.S. in my thoughts at all times, but but many times my results
lead me to belive I must be getting senile :-( Fred "Stephen Baker" wrote in message ... Glenn says: I will have to admit to an old programming axiom: "Within every complex program there is a simple one struggling to get out." :-) I have always held that it is easier to design a complex system than a simple one that does the same thing. My father always kept a piece of card with "Simplify" writ upon it stuck to his drawing board light. And he followed his own advice. ;-) Steve |
#9
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In article PmyVc.1663$A91.1254@okepread02,
Glenn Ashmore wrote: I will have to admit to an old programming axiom: "Within every complex program there is a simple one struggling to get out." :-) Ain't it the truth. One program I was tasked to maintain was 9000 lines long. By the time I finished, it was 3700 lines, did three times the work, didn't keep crashing, giving strange answers, and we no longer had to keep a single programmer maintaining it full time. Consultants! -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#10
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Careful there mate! I were one, even before I lernt to spel it! :-)
"Jere Lull" wrote in message ... In article PmyVc.1663$A91.1254@okepread02, Glenn Ashmore wrote: I will have to admit to an old programming axiom: "Within every complex program there is a simple one struggling to get out." :-) Ain't it the truth. One program I was tasked to maintain was 9000 lines long. By the time I finished, it was 3700 lines, did three times the work, didn't keep crashing, giving strange answers, and we no longer had to keep a single programmer maintaining it full time. Consultants! -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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