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Safety of boats ?
Where could someone go with a good idea about how to prevent a floating but
damaged sinking boat from floundering? This is not a nut case idea; I am an engineer und should know better. Done some checking with patent office and not even similar idea has been filed. I went through an American and Canadian patent process and hold two; but they cost me more than what I got back! I have not disclosed to anyone on this idea however. . Any interested ones out there. Like Steve Callahan Thanks Mike S. Dipl.Ing.FH |
File a provisional patent application (costs $75 if you do it
yourself). My lawyer charges me about $750 when he does it and I know I am getting soaked but thats business. Next, find a salvage company that might be interested and have them sign a Non-disclosure agreement. Most legit companies have no probs with such NDA. Ascertain the level of interest, if it is real, go for the patent along with its costs (probably about $8000). Good Luck |
"SISC" wrote in
: Where could someone go with a good idea about how to prevent a floating but damaged sinking boat from floundering? This is not a nut case idea; I am an engineer und should know better. Done some checking with patent office and not even similar idea has been filed. I went through an American and Canadian patent process and hold two; but they cost me more than what I got back! I have not disclosed to anyone on this idea however. . Any interested ones out there. Like Steve Callahan Thanks Mike S. Dipl.Ing.FH Hope this isn't an airbag or pingpong ball idea. They're already patented. -- Larry |
On Thu, 04 Aug 2005 02:23:30 GMT, "SISC" wrote:
Where could someone go with a good idea about how to prevent a floating but damaged sinking boat from floundering? It's "foundering", by the way. Many European yachts feature this by filling voids with floatation foam. Others feature watertight compartments and "crash zones", like in the circumnavigation races. The builder that comes to mind is ETAP, which is Belgian, I think. They make several ocean-going, "unsinkable" yachts. Not great on storage, but will go low and no lower, even if split in half, I am led to believe. R. |
Thanks for messages .
Still searching on airbags and such. Will post again later, but any lead, hint link is appreciated. Thanks Mike "SISC" wrote in message ... Where could someone go with a good idea about how to prevent a floating but damaged sinking boat from floundering? This is not a nut case idea; I am an engineer und should know better. Done some checking with patent office and not even similar idea has been filed. I went through an American and Canadian patent process and hold two; but they cost me more than what I got back! I have not disclosed to anyone on this idea however. . Any interested ones out there. Like Steve Callahan Thanks Mike S. Dipl.Ing.FH |
"SISC" wrote in news:A69Ke.72553$Ph4.2259242@ursa-
nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca: Thanks for messages . Still searching on airbags and such. Will post again later, but any lead, hint link is appreciated. Thanks Mike I've never figured out why yachts don't HAVE airbags that deploy automatically and fill the cabin from the gas canisters when the switch on the inside of the cabin overhead touches seawater.....making them unsinkable! "Stay with the boat", they always tell you. "Stay with the boat". -- Larry |
I can produce function prototype,but need partner mike
"Larry" wrote in message ... "SISC" wrote in news:A69Ke.72553$Ph4.2259242@ursa- nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca: Thanks for messages . Still searching on airbags and such. Will post again later, but any lead, hint link is appreciated. Thanks Mike I've never figured out why yachts don't HAVE airbags that deploy automatically and fill the cabin from the gas canisters when the switch on the inside of the cabin overhead touches seawater.....making them unsinkable! "Stay with the boat", they always tell you. "Stay with the boat". -- Larry |
In article , Larry
wrote: I've never figured out why yachts don't HAVE airbags that deploy automatically and fill the cabin from the gas canisters when the switch on the inside of the cabin overhead touches seawater.....making them unsinkable! There was such a company, but they've gone belly up. Don't know why, but suspect that most boats that would have such a system also have a liferaft of appropriate size. Some decks aren't very well attached to the hull. -- 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/ |
I've never figured out why yachts don't HAVE airbags that deploy
automatically and fill the cabin from the gas canisters when the switch on the inside of the cabin overhead touches seawater.....making them unsinkable! SISC wrote: I can produce function prototype,but need partner It's already been done. Problem: sailors are cheapskates and would rather take the risk of sinking than pay for the system. Do a google search for "Yachtsaver"... went bankrupt last year IIRC. There are also a number of yachts built with positive flotation, ETAP & Sadler notably. IMHO it would not be unreasonable to install positive flotation on many small to medium size sailboats. It'd be some work, and cost something, so maybe that's why nobody actually does it. "The reason worry kills more people than work is that more people do it." DSK |
I also thought about this years ago. mostly for a masthead float for a
trimaran. I considered using calcium carbide that reacts with water to produce LOTS of acetylene gas that would seriously inflate some kind of bag. Of course acetylene can be explosive with a spark but you are sinking anyway....... The calcium carbide would be fairly easy to store as it comes as rock-like chunks but produces copious volumes of gas. I have also considerd adding foam floatation to my boat. She has many little areas that are never used for anything whose total volume might be enough. |
wrote in message ups.com... I also thought about this years ago. mostly for a masthead float for a trimaran. I considered using calcium carbide that reacts with water to produce LOTS of acetylene gas that would seriously inflate some kind of bag. Of course acetylene can be explosive with a spark but you are sinking anyway....... The calcium carbide would be fairly easy to store as it comes as rock-like chunks but produces copious volumes of gas. I have also considerd adding foam floatation to my boat. She has many little areas that are never used for anything whose total volume might be enough. Why do you need a masthead float for a trimaran? If your tri is any bigger than say 16ft, the only thing you would accomplish, is breaking the mast. A tri is designed to lay turtle, in the unlikely event she flips, providing a huge life raft. On her side. she would just present a huge bottom to be blown around by the wind. You have to really try hard to flip any decent sized tri. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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Larry,
You should consider converting to R134A. It works well, and can be purchased for around ~3$-5$/can at any auto parts store. You can also buy it in 30lb canisters without a license. The only downside to converting an old system designed for R12 or R22 is that you will need a new expansion valve. Also you may need a new compressor to develop the higher pressure needed if your old compressor is tired. If you want to be able to directly read the temperatures, you'll need a new set of guages also, so there is some expense to converting over. However, when you are done with the conversion you are back to the days of cheap and legal freon :-). Over time you'll spend more than the conversion cost keeping an old R12 system going. Don W. Larry wrote: wrote in ups.com: I have also considerd adding foam floatation to my boat. She has many little areas that are never used for anything whose total volume might be enough. Airbags deployed with liquid freon would be very compact to store, non- flammable and storage is at low pressure, unlike CO2. That'd work as soon as you got past the government bureaucrats hell bent on maximizing freon profits for a few big chemical companies. My last batch of R-12 smuggled in from Aruba was made in Tennesee! We Americans just can't buy it. |
Many interesting comments and hints; thank you.
Would like to post these questions based on all the prior responses: 1) Has anyone out there used , seen or had experiences with "yachtsaver"bags? Manufacturer is out of business but the idea doesn't sound to bad? Any Comments? 2) How much is the potential sinking of vessel on the mind of you the owners? Do you think a reasonable solution would be welcome? I tshould affect insurance premiums, right? What's your feel? May be I am a bit paranoid about hitting submerged log, halfsunk containers and the like. But even if insurance may cover loss,can anyone guarantee life(s)? cheers mike |
SISC wrote:
Many interesting comments and hints; thank you. Would like to post these questions based on all the prior responses: 1) Has anyone out there used , seen or had experiences with "yachtsaver"bags? Manufacturer is out of business but the idea doesn't sound to bad? Any Comments? Yes, we had them on our last boat. They went out of business for a few reasons: - lack of sales - cost of equipment - EC tests showed that the calculated buoyancy was greater than actual tests... so a lot of potential liabilty with installed installations. - worry about decks ripping off if the bags are not installed into structure. I think the idea is sound for smaller vessels. For larger ones, the cost of the equipment is a lot higher than a liferaft. For our heavy 30' boat, the cost was about the same as a liferaft. A bag with 1 ton lift was about 4"x12"x30" deflated. Our boat needed 4 bags. 2) How much is the potential sinking of vessel on the mind of you the owners? Not much anymore. I've got a catamaran with 4 watertight compartments in each hull now :) Do you think a reasonable solution would be welcome? I tshould affect insurance premiums, right? |
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