messabout
10-27-2008, 01:49 PM
An organization; Wecansolveit.com, have been sposoring TV and Magazine ads of late. The organization demands that we "free ourselves from our addiction to oil". A recent ad in, Scientific American, shows a visual impact picture of a collossal tanker. It is moving slowly through the water.
The tanker, if viewed in plan has a perfectly rounded bow. The bow at the waterline also seems to be rounded. That detail grabbed my attention and prompted questions: Is that the standard layout for vessels designed for that purpose? It is clear that rounded ends as opposed to pointy ones can provide more interior volume. How does that planform square with propulsion efficiency? Comments ?.
I reckon that the ship cruises at S/L ratios of considerably less than one. Nonetheless that bow is going to throw up one helluva bow wave. I would not want to be within 5 miles of that thing when I am playing around in my dinghy. (fortuneately there are precious few tankers plying the inland lakes of Florida where I am most likely to sail. That picture will surely keep me from sailing in Tampa Bay near Port of Tampa gas docks)
The tanker, if viewed in plan has a perfectly rounded bow. The bow at the waterline also seems to be rounded. That detail grabbed my attention and prompted questions: Is that the standard layout for vessels designed for that purpose? It is clear that rounded ends as opposed to pointy ones can provide more interior volume. How does that planform square with propulsion efficiency? Comments ?.
I reckon that the ship cruises at S/L ratios of considerably less than one. Nonetheless that bow is going to throw up one helluva bow wave. I would not want to be within 5 miles of that thing when I am playing around in my dinghy. (fortuneately there are precious few tankers plying the inland lakes of Florida where I am most likely to sail. That picture will surely keep me from sailing in Tampa Bay near Port of Tampa gas docks)