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"Jere Lull" wrote
It seems you don't know the Chesapeake Bay well. That's sure true. I've only sailed on it once and that was actually motoring in a 380 foot Russian square rigged school ship. I'm working however, for people who know it better than just about anyone. The jets extend your baby's working area by tens of thousands of square miles of the most environmentally "interesting" areas. The difference in draft between the research vessel and a prop version is actually surprisingly little. As measured, it would only be about a foot if the prop version had partial tunnels as on the Woods Hole vessel. Not having this expensive, delicate props and rudders right at the bottom though means you can responsibly operate with less margin of water under the boat. This is kind of a fuzzy figure and varies with weather and other conditions but probably will usually let the jet boat operate in 2 - 3 feet less water than the prop boat. Draft is still 4' - 8" at full load so a lot of the bay is closed to her anyway. It's the region between about 6 and 9 feet that will be more available to her than if she had props. Nobody has actually calculated what that area is. Somewhere between hundreds and tens of thousands I would guess ![]() And you don't "plow" through an oyster bar, you *hit* one and stop very, very quickly. I didn't mean to imply that plowing through was part of the mission profile. I expect the boat would stop. After backing or being pulled off however, she ought to be able to continue working instead of heading for a shipyard. She has a foot deep full length keel which is unusual for a power boat but assists her station keeping and damps rolling. I expect that would go pretty cleanly through a lot of stuff when they were lacking just a few inches or a foot of draft, unlike a set of spinning props and rudders. I forgot to answer Larry about the jets injesting stuff. The impellers in these things are pretty industrial grade, think tree limb chipper rather than jet ski plastic part. They will digest pretty much anything that will fit through the intake grates and is low enough in density to either float or be sucked up from the bottom. The impellers may get chipped and lose efficiency but, unlike props, they don't immediately start vibrating so badly that they have to be pulled. You can keep operating a damaged impeller for quite a while. -- Roger Long |
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