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On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 04:07:40 GMT, "Eisboch"
wrote: Wayne.B wrote in message .. . On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 08:29:29 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: When, exactly, is a boat on plane and how can you tell, precisely, when this happens? ================================== Good question. We all know it when we see it, but the formal definition is tougher. I think it relates to how much of the hull is riding above the water as opposed to plowing through it. That implies that planing could be defined as a percentage of hull lift versus displacement, for example 50% or more of the hull normally below the water, rises above water level when "on plane". This jibes reasonably well with the popular phrase "out of the hole", meaning "on plane". Another definition might involve flow separation at the transom. Most times a boat "on plane" will have little or no transom surface directly touching the water even though the bottom of the transom is still below the water line. It is also tempting to define planing as a ratio of actual speed to so called "hull speed" but there are plenty of heavy displacement boats that exceed theoretical hull speed by wide margins without actually giving the appearance of being on plane. Motor yachts and fishing trawlers come readily to mind as examples. They do it through sheer power, pushing aside a lot of water as opposed to actually rising above it. By the time a boat is going over two or three times its theoretical hull speed however, it usually gives the appearance of being on plane regardless of weight. There might be another mathematical approach worth considering. As a boat begins to exceed theoretical hull speed it takes huge increases in power to increase speed by relatively small percentages. Typically power required varies as the cube of speed. As a boat begins to plane however, the power required still increases exponentially with speed, but at a slower rate, more like the square of speed opposed to the cube. Using that approach, planing would be defined as the mathematical inflection point where the speed/power exponent begins to decrease. Comments? I am not sure I'd buy paragraph #2 which relates to flow separation at the transom. Certainly true of a speedy, planning hull, it is also true of some of the boats you described in paragraph #3. I've seen and been on large, heavy, but highly powered boats that certainly are not planning, yet are going fast enough to have none of the transom in the water, other than at the water line. In fact, if powerful enough, they will create a "roostertail", but still be plowing through the water. I like your first explanation. Your math approach is probably correct, but I get a headache doing it in my head. I've got the ultimate definition. Planing - the act of making a lot of wood shavings out of a large piece of wood. Later, Tom "Beware the one legged man in a butt kicking contest - he is there for a reason." Wun Hung Lo - date unknown |
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