8knots
01-15-2004, 03:49 PM
This may be better posted in construction threads but poses a design issue too so please bear with me!
Living about 40 miles from the nearest deep water launch point and wanting a large boat I have a engineering/design question.
Would anybody even consider building a powercat in 2 sections or possibly 3? as it is I am restricted only by height (17') so it would be something like..
1 stbd hull
2 port hull
3 wing deck
4 stbd deck
5 port deck
6 center deck and super - less fly bridge
The transport of the "modules" would require a fair amount of sacrificial structures and bracing But could be done! With the proper engineering I think it could be done safely without the un-easy feeling in the back of your mind "This thing is held together with bolts and epoxy" as you fight the sea!
I am a fledgling to multihull thinking and wonder how much "wring" these vessels endure. Say quartering into a head sea I "know" one hull is going to respond to the pressures of the sea at a different rate than the other at any given time other than at rest. This I think requires carefull engineering of the wingdeck structure. Most of the cat designs I see are a great big cave in the middle with little room below deck for structure. Granted most are sandwitch FRP, bagged with a carefull laminate schedule.
The "module" method lends itself to easier construction I think
smaller units of tooling = less manpower to do the layup
easier units to de-mold with smaller facility and lifting equipment.
In a nutshell...."would you put your name on it?"
any ideas and cautions welcome
8Knots
Living about 40 miles from the nearest deep water launch point and wanting a large boat I have a engineering/design question.
Would anybody even consider building a powercat in 2 sections or possibly 3? as it is I am restricted only by height (17') so it would be something like..
1 stbd hull
2 port hull
3 wing deck
4 stbd deck
5 port deck
6 center deck and super - less fly bridge
The transport of the "modules" would require a fair amount of sacrificial structures and bracing But could be done! With the proper engineering I think it could be done safely without the un-easy feeling in the back of your mind "This thing is held together with bolts and epoxy" as you fight the sea!
I am a fledgling to multihull thinking and wonder how much "wring" these vessels endure. Say quartering into a head sea I "know" one hull is going to respond to the pressures of the sea at a different rate than the other at any given time other than at rest. This I think requires carefull engineering of the wingdeck structure. Most of the cat designs I see are a great big cave in the middle with little room below deck for structure. Granted most are sandwitch FRP, bagged with a carefull laminate schedule.
The "module" method lends itself to easier construction I think
smaller units of tooling = less manpower to do the layup
easier units to de-mold with smaller facility and lifting equipment.
In a nutshell...."would you put your name on it?"
any ideas and cautions welcome
8Knots