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K
 
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Default Question about capsizing a small boat

Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken



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Doug Kanter
 
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My (now ex-)wife, son and I took a canoe safety course a few years back. The
instructor needed to teach us how to right a flipped canoe, so naturally, we
had to flip it first. It took a concerted effort to do this. It's not as
easy as you think. 170 lb man, 150 lb woman, 75 lb kid - we had to start the
thing rocking and then at the right moment, lean way over.

The same summer, I bought this stupid f**king rope ladder for my 14'
aluminum yacht, intended to help swimmers out of the water. Dumb ladder. It
took two people *in* the boat to pull a swimmer out of the water. The yacht
listed, the gunwale came within inches of the water, but the boat refused to
go any further (not that we wanted it to). This was with me stepping on the
stupid f**king rope ladder, and the other two right at the gunwale offering
assistance.

Maybe a boat with more of a rounded bottom would tip, but I can only relate
these two experiences. Now, if the water was colder and the spouses had just
had an argument, everything might be different.

"K" wrote in message
link.net...
Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume

that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the

three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up

on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were

all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and

get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken





  #3   Report Post  
Don White
 
Posts: n/a
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"K" wrote in message
link.net...
Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume

that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the

three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up

on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were

all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and

get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken


I would suggest the boat would tip throwing all into the water. The question
is...would it remain upright with 'some' water inside.
I can remember coming up to a dock after sailing a 12' Kolbi. I had taken
the dagger board up and was about to step off. I ended up with my hands on
the dock and my toes still in the boat. The rest of me was bridged over the
gap.


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William G. Andersen
 
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Interesting.
My first thought to the original post was that putting feet up on one
gunwale wouldn't change much - the centers of gravity and buoyance would
still be pretty much aligned.
If they were determined to cause the boat to tip, they'd have to stand up
and lean to cause the center of gravity to be outside the center of
bouyancy.
After reading your post, I suspect that they wouldn't all go overboard at
the same time, so I would expect the boat to right itself and not
necessarily ever take water over the gunwale.

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...
My (now ex-)wife, son and I took a canoe safety course a few years back.

The
instructor needed to teach us how to right a flipped canoe, so naturally,

we
had to flip it first. It took a concerted effort to do this. It's not as
easy as you think. 170 lb man, 150 lb woman, 75 lb kid - we had to start

the
thing rocking and then at the right moment, lean way over.

The same summer, I bought this stupid f**king rope ladder for my 14'
aluminum yacht, intended to help swimmers out of the water. Dumb ladder.

It
took two people *in* the boat to pull a swimmer out of the water. The

yacht
listed, the gunwale came within inches of the water, but the boat refused

to
go any further (not that we wanted it to). This was with me stepping on

the
stupid f**king rope ladder, and the other two right at the gunwale

offering
assistance.

Maybe a boat with more of a rounded bottom would tip, but I can only

relate
these two experiences. Now, if the water was colder and the spouses had

just
had an argument, everything might be different.

"K" wrote in message
link.net...
Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an

outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume

that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or

harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the

three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot

up
on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were

all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and

get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken







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Bob La Londe
 
Posts: n/a
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Other than having the misfortune of being dumped out of a canoe once I am
not an expert. That being said it would depend largely on the type of boat
and the circumstances. A fairly wide beam flat bottom boat is almost
impossible to tip over. Some of the round bottom row boats that were
popular in the last century might be more likely to tip one or more of the
occupants into the water and then right itself. In my own experience that
is the most likely result. In my own wet experience the canoe I dumped
myself out of dumped me into the water, took on some water, and righted
itself with both of my kids still in the canoe. It is a fairly wide beam
lake canoe. I suppose a narrow beam river canoe would be slightly more
likely to capsize.

As a side note. My uncle Paul and I spent many an hour canoeing on fish and
camp trips with a narrow beam Oldtown river canoe, and other than the rain
we never even got wet. Not in the roughest sections of the rivers we ran.

--
** FREE Fishing Lures
** Weekly drawing
** Public Fishing and Boating Forums
** www.YumaBassMan.com


"K" wrote in message
link.net...
Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume

that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the

three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up

on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were

all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and

get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken







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Falky foo
 
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If I were reading a story I'd believe it if they all leaned out and it
tipped over. You might plant something earlier in the story about the boat
being tippy though.



"K" wrote in message
link.net...
Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume

that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the

three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up

on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were

all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and

get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken





  #7   Report Post  
Doug Kanter
 
Posts: n/a
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"WaIIy" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 02 Nov 2004 01:28:44 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote:

The same summer, I bought this stupid f**king rope ladder for my 14'
aluminum yacht, intended to help swimmers out of the water. Dumb ladder.

It
took two people *in* the boat to pull a swimmer out of the water. The

yacht
listed, the gunwale came within inches of the water, but the boat refused

to
go any further (not that we wanted it to). This was with me stepping on

the
stupid f**king rope ladder, and the other two right at the gunwale

offering
assistance.


I'm glad to see you could finally vent about that rope ladder.

I am thinking about getting a rope ladder for my boat.

What do you think?


The kind I bought has hard plastic steps, with ropes running vertically
through holes in the steps. The main problem is that when you try to climb,
the ladder (which isn't rigid, obviously) wants to go under the boat, which
leaves you leaning backwards. Pretty comical, actually, except that when
you're on just the right step to try and haul your leg over the gunwale, the
other kneecap's located exactly at the gunwale, threatening to get smacked
as you flop away from and back toward the boat.

I bought it for two reasons. First, my boat's too small for a rigid ladder,
and this rope thing collapses into a package the size of maybe a loaf of
Wonder bread. And, I don't have enough flat, vertical area beneath the
gunwales to be able to use the rigid ladders with those little feet that
fold out and brace against the side. If YOUR boat will work with a rigid
ladder, forget the rope version, unless you just want to have it stashed
someplace for emergencies.

To its credit, though, the rope ladder has some potential in terms of
dealing with an unruly guest who needs a tuneup and a lesson in humility.


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Slambram
 
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On Tue, 02 Nov 2004 01:06:55 GMT, "K" wrote:

Hi. I'm looking to the experts (the boating experts, not the political
experts) for some technical help with a writing project I'm working on.
Say there's a small, open, no frills, 12 or 13 foot boat with an outboard
motor. In the boat are two adults and their ten year-old son. Assume that
the boat is sitting stationary in relatively calm waters (bay or harbor),
and that there's no water inside the boat. How likely is it that the three
of them might capsize it if they were to all simultaneously put a foot up on
the same side of the hull with most of their weight? Maybe they were all
reaching out for something. Would they flip the whole thing over and get
dumped in the water? Is that conceivable? Likely? Doubtful?
Any thoughts welcome.
Thanks...
-Ken



Gee ambulance chaser, i mean Ken, i don't know. Were they wearing
life vests?

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Don White
 
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My sailboat is an 18.5 foot Sandpiper. I ordered a hinged stainless steel
boarding ladder that I will bolt through the transom. When underway, the
four steps hinge up and can be fastened to the stern rail.


  #10   Report Post  
Doug Kanter
 
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"Don White" wrote in message
...

My sailboat is an 18.5 foot Sandpiper. I ordered a hinged stainless steel
boarding ladder that I will bolt through the transom. When underway, the
four steps hinge up and can be fastened to the stern rail.



Well...I have to figure something out, even if it involves heavily modifying
a boarding ladder. We're missing out on some good swimming opportunities.


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