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Yeh, Mike; that makes sense.
Or... does it? At first blush that looks like an absolutely reasonable rebuttal of my speculation, but then... certainly a stationary boat must pivot around its center of gravity, but d'you s'pose that is necessarily so when a boat is carving into a turn, building up a pile of water on the outside-of-the-turn side of the bow? 'Course, the OP is talking about an outrigger, and they aren't s'posed to carve because they aren't s'posed to heel. Or is that is necessarily so when one end, due to a short outrigger, offers more lateral resistance than the other end? Mightnot the pivot point then migrate toward the end with the outrigger? It's too early for me to follow these thought-experiments through! -Richard, His Kanubic Travesty -- ================================================== ==================== Richard Hopley Winston-Salem, NC, USA .. rhopley[at]earthlink[dot]net .. Nothing really matters except Boats, Sex, and Rock'n'Roll .. rhopley[at]wfubmc[dot]edu .. OK, OK; computer programming for scientific research also matters ================================================== ==================== On Jan 26, 12:38 am, Michael Daly wrote: Oci-One Kanubi wrote: more or less pivoting on the bow. Boats always pivot around their center of gravity. It can't be any other way. Mike |
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