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Narasimham wrote:
Am mechanical engineer with a composites background presently residing in south India. After recent Tsunami disaster, toying with the idea to help make hand /sail/outboard moter powered fiberglass fishing boats of standard 30 feet length. Raw materials .. chopped strand mat, fiberglass cloth, polyester resin and rigid PU foam are commercially available locally, as is semi-skilled labour who could make boats to pre designed drawings. I think you first have to define the boat and it's mission a bit better - hand (paddle/oar) powered will have to be smaller than sail or outboard power. How much cargo (fish) will it carry? How fast does it need to go? Rigid PU foam is o.k. for insulation and flotation but not structural purposes; it is too brittle and weak. Can someone help to guide in the following ? Shapes: Are drawings available on net? or on payment? What hull shape is better? U? Flatbottom? Hull shape will depend on whether it will be a planing boat (fast with outboard power) or slow (sail or human powered) If you hire a naval architect they will define the shape of the hull and the construction method. If you are building more than a few boats, a female mould (concave shape) is the only way to build efficiently. You may also be able to purchase stock (premade) plans from a plan company. Do Lloyds or other certifying agencies based in Europe/US have a branch or mechanism to test and certify marine craft after fabrication and testing when involved right from beginning stages in India? Yes, Lloyds, DNV (Det Norske Veritas) and ABS (American Bureau of Shipping) are the big ones. But for a third world project they will be costly and probably not worthwhile or needed. If existing wooden hull shapes are duplicated but replaced by solid fiberglass laminate or polyurethene foam (closed cell to keep out water) sandwich, would it serve the purpose with stability resisting wave forces with adequate margin before capsizing? It depends on what the existing shapes are and how heavy they are built and where the weights are located - too complex to give a simple answer here. For a physics picture of stability: 1) Is metacentric height a parameter to assess stability? Yes - higher GM means higher static stability 2) Draft. On what factors is load-depth of immersion relations established? The shape of the waterplane area (cross section of the hull) determines how much it will sink at a given draft. One thought - in Mexico fisherman changed their style of fishing boat over the past 20 years or so. Initally they used dugout canoes with paddles or simple oars and stayed close to shore. Later dugouts had small outboards added, and were sometimes replicated in fiberglass. Then the "panga" appeared, a very shallow deadrise (shallow V shape hull) about 24-26' long. It is built in fiberglass and typically uses a 48,55, or 70 HP outboard motor. These boats are very seaworthy and often venture offshore about 50 miles, catching up to about 1 tonne of fish before returning home at slower speeds. Gill nets are the most used fishing gear. These boats are beached at the end of the day or anchored just off the beach. They are built in solid fiberglass with some wood for rubrails and seats etc. They look like this: http://www.panga.com/pangagallery/pangamex.html I think they are a good solution to Mexican fisherman's needs but the government had to offer low interest loans to allow the fisherman to buy the motor and boat. Good luck. Evan Gatehouse |
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