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Techie August 23rd 03 03:19 AM

Conversion question for the group Alu-Steel
 
If a plan for a ship calls for 3/8" thickness in steel hull, what would
that be app. in Aluminium instead?

Tom Dacon August 23rd 03 03:55 AM

Conversion question for the group Alu-Steel
 
That's a question best left to the naval architect or his engineer. There's
no quick-and-easy rule of thumb for something like that.

Tom Dacon

"Techie" wrote in message
.. .
If a plan for a ship calls for 3/8" thickness in steel hull, what would
that be app. in Aluminium instead?




boatdreams August 28th 03 06:53 AM

Conversion question for the group Alu-Steel
 
With the emphasis on "approximately", aluminum has 60% of the strength
of steel. Algebra: 0.60 / 1.0 = 0.375 / x and x = 0.625 or 5/8"
Good luck,
Boatdreams

Techie wrote:

If a plan for a ship calls for 3/8" thickness in steel hull, what would
that be app. in Aluminium instead?



Matt/Meribeth Pedersen August 31st 03 11:27 PM

Conversion question for the group Alu-Steel
 
This is precisely why you should hire an engineer. If you only
look at strength, then your boat may fail. Stiffness is
often the governing criteria, and the spacing of frames,
bulkheads, stringers will have as much of an effect as
the thickness of the plating. Also the size of channel,
angle iron, etc will be different between aluminum and steel,
resulting in a whole new set of calculations. All these
dimensions are interelated, and making sure that things fail
in the right order is part of a good engineering analysis as well.

"boatdreams" wrote in message
...
With the emphasis on "approximately", aluminum has 60% of the strength
of steel. Algebra: 0.60 / 1.0 = 0.375 / x and x = 0.625 or 5/8"
Good luck,
Boatdreams

Techie wrote:

If a plan for a ship calls for 3/8" thickness in steel hull, what would
that be app. in Aluminium instead?





Stephen Baker September 1st 03 12:44 AM

Conversion question for the group Alu-Steel
 
Matt/Meribeth said:

All these
dimensions are interelated, and making sure that things fail
in the right order is part of a good engineering analysis as well.


Ahem!!
A perfectly engineered structure shoul fail all at the same time - totally
disintegrating to molecular levels. At least, that's how Herreshoff saw it.

;-)

Steve
Stephen C. Baker - Yacht Designer
http://members.aol.com/SailDesign/pr...cbweb/home.htm


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