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On 1 Apr 2004 14:14:21 -0000, Ante Topic Mimara
] wrote: DUINK writes: As far as I know displacement = weight. Somehow, this doesn't sound right to me. Certainly the weight of the boat will displace the amount of water with that same weight (hence the term displacement). If something displaces X pounds of water, it must weigh X - n to be able to float. It must weigh less than the amount of water it displaces, else it will have neutral (or worse, negative) buoyancy. This is Archimedes principle "a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid." http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/sci/A0804583.html Having said this, how do I determine how much it weighs, from limited information, without being there to weigh it? Displacement equals weight. Jack __________________________________________________ Jack Dale Swiftsure Sailing Academy Director ISPA and CYA Instructor http://www.swiftsuresailing.com Phone: 1 (877) 470-SAIL (toll free) __________________________________________________ |
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