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On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 17:58:37 +0200, "Steve Lusardi"
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: remove ns from my header address to reply via email If I am rowing a boat in a breeze, _and the windage is the same_, I would prefer to be rowing the lighter boat. I has less warter friction. BTW. Your post compares an _architect's_ statements about _living_ in corks and icecubes, to illustrate the problems between an inflatable vs an aluminium boat, to talk about the relative "weights" (densities) of GRP vs wood, and your apparent aim is to say that GRP is heavier than wood, if one really thinks about it. Care to elucidate? Jess, If you are inferring that GRP is lighter than wood, it is the unusual case if it is. GRP and its derivitives have many advantages, but light weight is not one. The best example I could give is trying to row an aluminum skiff or an inflatable in a breese. An architech once said to me "Would you rather live in a cork or in an ice cube?" Lightweight craft have their place in racing and carrying. If you don't race and you don't intend to carry it on your back, weight is on the bottom of your list of important items. Steve ************************************************** ** I went on a guided tour not long ago.The guide got us lost. He was a non-compass mentor.........sorry .........no I'm not. |
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