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On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 08:31:53 -0500, I am Tosk
wrote: I remember an Americas cup boat at one time that tried a dimpled design like a golf ball. IIRC the idea was to introduce air bubbles across the bottom. They suggested it was like the laps on a viking ship which apparently kept air bubbles under the surface along the seams or something like that. Saw some discussion of that. And the engineers pooh-poohing it, since a golf ball is flying though the air. Also saw that Dennis Connor was wet-sanding the hulls of his racing boats and when asked why, he said "Because everybody else is doing it." They actually have some claims for this boat, but it might be all PR. Seems as fuel prices rise, they could get some traction if their claims are true. I imagine a big cost of sportsfisher operation is fuel, and cutting that cost would be a boon to business. But maybe tradition works against trying anything new. --Vic |
#3
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#4
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On Nov 23, 10:17*am, wrote:
On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 07:57:18 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 08:31:53 -0500, I am Tosk wrote: I remember an Americas cup boat at one time that tried a dimpled design like a golf ball. IIRC the idea was to introduce air bubbles across the bottom. They suggested it was like the laps on a viking ship which apparently kept air bubbles under the surface along the seams or something like that. Saw some discussion of that. *And the engineers pooh-poohing it, since a golf ball is flying though the air. Also saw that Dennis Connor was wet-sanding the hulls of his racing boats and when asked why, he said "Because everybody else is doing it." They actually have some claims for this boat, but it might be all PR. Seems as fuel prices rise, they could get some traction if their claims are true. I imagine a big cost of sportsfisher operation is fuel, and cutting that cost would be a boon to business. But maybe tradition works against trying anything new. --Vic Fluids all act similarly when you are talking about flow across the surface. Mythbusters actually did show some improvement when they dimpled a car body.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hail damage? |
#5
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On Nov 23, 12:18*pm, Tim wrote:
On Nov 23, 10:17*am, wrote: On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 07:57:18 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 08:31:53 -0500, I am Tosk wrote: I remember an Americas cup boat at one time that tried a dimpled design like a golf ball. IIRC the idea was to introduce air bubbles across the bottom. They suggested it was like the laps on a viking ship which apparently kept air bubbles under the surface along the seams or something like that. Saw some discussion of that. *And the engineers pooh-poohing it, since a golf ball is flying though the air. Also saw that Dennis Connor was wet-sanding the hulls of his racing boats and when asked why, he said "Because everybody else is doing it." They actually have some claims for this boat, but it might be all PR. Seems as fuel prices rise, they could get some traction if their claims are true. I imagine a big cost of sportsfisher operation is fuel, and cutting that cost would be a boon to business. But maybe tradition works against trying anything new. --Vic Fluids all act similarly when you are talking about flow across the surface. Mythbusters actually did show some improvement when they dimpled a car body.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hail damage? Vic: Unfortunately, when it comes to hydrodynamics, anybody here is more qualified than me. From what little I understand about planing boat performance, weight is the big issue for fuel economy. You are supporting the entire weight of the boat on that tiny portion of the hull in contact with the water meaning you gotta push it at a minimum speed to get it to plane. Maybe it is like friction where the force due to friction is proportional to weight. At any rate, Renn Tolman says weight is the primary issue for fuel economy so his boats are very lightweight. My 20' Tolman weighs about 800 lbs so is very economical on fuel (if you can call 5 mpg economical) optimum speed is roughly 20 mph with 5 people aboard. Even using it to take the kids kneeboarding in an afternoon it uses little fuel. Tolman also has a design for a "SeaBright" skiff that uses a diesel that supposedly gets extreme fuel economy at speeds of about 18 mph. If you do not mind going slow, check out the "Diesel Duck", a 38' "troller cruiser" that supposedly uses 3/4 gal/hour of diesel at 8 kts. It also has sail assist if you want to use even less. For me, I thought fuel economy would be a worry but so far with the Tolman it never has been an issue. I have never used more than 7 gallons of fuel in a whole day. The larger Tolman's (such as the Jumbo at 23') using 4 cycle motors are supposed to get over 6 mpg with a 125 hp 4 cycle. |
#6
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On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 09:54:12 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: Unfortunately, when it comes to hydrodynamics, anybody here is more qualified than me. From what little I understand about planing boat performance, weight is the big issue for fuel economy. You are supporting the entire weight of the boat on that tiny portion of the hull in contact with the water meaning you gotta push it at a minimum speed to get it to plane. Maybe it is like friction where the force due to friction is proportional to weight. Think it's more due to prop inefficiency. Slippage increasing at higher speeds. With a car once you get enough torque to lock up the converter, efficiency increases. Of course your wheels aren't slipping. Water and concrete are different, but analogies can be useful. So how do you make the prop more efficiently push water? Beats me, but maybe how you feed water to the prop at the front end could help, which is one reason I find the tunnel hulls interesting, even aside from what else they do in floating the boat. Sometimes I wish I was an engineer. Not often though. At any rate, Renn Tolman says weight is the primary issue for fuel economy so his boats are very lightweight. My 20' Tolman weighs about 800 lbs so is very economical on fuel (if you can call 5 mpg economical) optimum speed is roughly 20 mph with 5 people aboard. Even using it to take the kids kneeboarding in an afternoon it uses little fuel. Tolman also has a design for a "SeaBright" skiff that uses a diesel that supposedly gets extreme fuel economy at speeds of about 18 mph. Think the "Rescue Minor" in this link is the first time I became aware of the tunnel hulls. http://www.fishyfish.com/renn_tolman/index.html Neat. How much of the economy comes from the light weight and use of a diesel I don't know. If you do not mind going slow, check out the "Diesel Duck", a 38' "troller cruiser" that supposedly uses 3/4 gal/hour of diesel at 8 kts. It also has sail assist if you want to use even less. For me, I thought fuel economy would be a worry but so far with the Tolman it never has been an issue. I have never used more than 7 gallons of fuel in a whole day. The larger Tolman's (such as the Jumbo at 23') using 4 cycle motors are supposed to get over 6 mpg with a 125 hp 4 cycle. From what I've seen you can get pretty good economy from displacement hulls if you stay away from hull speed and have the propulsion gear optimized. Even planing hulls don't have to be planed. There's a guy with a 24' Carolina Skiff DLX who fishes mostly creeks and such, but sometimes goes into the Chesapeake Bay and the Virginia Eastern Shore. His engine is a tiller 9.9 4-stroke. Says his typical mileage is 16.5 mpg. Probably goes about 5-6 knots. He didn't say. All of this will matter more when/if fuel gets to 10 bucks a gallon. --Vic |
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