Boysie
02-14-2008, 07:21 PM
Hi Folks,
I have the plans of a 19 ft monohedron planing hull that is 5ft 0ins across the chines midships reducing to 4ft 10ins at the transom, beam 7ft 6ins (so there was quite a lot of flare in the sides) that I built in 1963 for pulling rock lobster pots. The boat was very successful, handling rough water particlularly well.
I have moved to a location where we have to cross a shallow bar and have decided to build a boat to the same plan but increasing the width across the chines at the transom to 5ft 0ins. A friend (not a designer) tells me that if I do this then the boat will be hard to steer in a following sea. He says that in his experience some narrowing across the chines at the stern (albeit small) is essential. Is he right?
Regards, Boysie.
I have the plans of a 19 ft monohedron planing hull that is 5ft 0ins across the chines midships reducing to 4ft 10ins at the transom, beam 7ft 6ins (so there was quite a lot of flare in the sides) that I built in 1963 for pulling rock lobster pots. The boat was very successful, handling rough water particlularly well.
I have moved to a location where we have to cross a shallow bar and have decided to build a boat to the same plan but increasing the width across the chines at the transom to 5ft 0ins. A friend (not a designer) tells me that if I do this then the boat will be hard to steer in a following sea. He says that in his experience some narrowing across the chines at the stern (albeit small) is essential. Is he right?
Regards, Boysie.