View Full Version : How is this kind of boat called in english?


Arvy
10-18-2009, 02:03 PM
Hi all,

As the topic already says, I am curious how the type of boat in the image is being called in english (in dutch it is called a sloep).

Greetz,
Arvy

peter radclyffe
10-18-2009, 02:11 PM
a launch or open dayboat

Submarine Tom
10-19-2009, 11:07 PM
Or, anything from a "run-about" to a "yacht"...

messabout
10-20-2009, 05:01 PM
The picture shows an open boat with a bow that is not pointed. There are several possibilities for naming (in English or American, which is not entirely english) The boat could be called a power Garvey. We have a crude but very popular boat with the same general configuration that is called a Jon boat. Both the garvey and the Jon boat usually have flat bottoms. Your picture shows a rich looking boat. Jon boats are seldom as elaborate as that. They are most often used as small fishing boats and seldom exceed 6 metres in length. Our inland waterways are literally crawling with them. We also have boats that have blunt bows but the bottom is made with vee shape, some have two or even three vees under the boat. These are often called Whalers because the original most popular brand was the Boston Whaler.

JLIMA
10-20-2009, 09:19 PM
Personally i would call it a launch, however it might also be considered a form of whaler but it looks like a displacement hull which says launch so it's a launch

hoytedow
10-20-2009, 09:35 PM
The picture shows an open boat with a bow that is not pointed. There are several possibilities for naming (in English or American, which is not entirely english) The boat could be called a power Garvey. We have a crude but very popular boat with the same general configuration that is called a Jon boat. Both the garvey and the Jon boat usually have flat bottoms. Your picture shows a rich looking boat. Jon boats are seldom as elaborate as that. They are most often used as small fishing boats and seldom exceed 6 metres in length. Our inland waterways are literally crawling with them. We also have boats that have blunt bows but the bottom is made with vee shape, some have two or even three vees under the boat. These are often called Whalers because the original most popular brand was the Boston Whaler.
If American-English were as English as English-English, would we call jonboats looboats? I believe garveys have a slight rocker bottom, though flat from side to side.

Arvy
10-21-2009, 04:08 AM
Thanks for the replies so far, I think Launchboat might be the most appropriate name then. In the netherlands the small canals in the cities are crowded with them. They typically range from 5 meters to 10 meters long. Some have flat sterns, others have a round, pointy stern, almost all have a pointy bow however. Almost all of these vessels have multiple overlapping seams (at least visually as they are most often made from frp).

The richness of how they look is probably coming from the fact that they are mostly used as pleasure boats, for example to take out friends for cruising through the canals and sip wine and eat cheese on them :) they are almost never used for fishing. So a real luxury product.

I will try to find a better picture of a larger one maybe even (if I can find them) some lines, which would probably make it easier to put a name on them as when I looked at the picture again it is quite a bad one for getting a good picture of it.

apex1
10-21-2009, 04:19 AM
Admirals Launch, or just launch is the common term.

Regards
Richard





make toot when you need a new one................

Arvy
10-21-2009, 04:27 AM
As promised some more pictures of these type of vessels, this one however is slightly less rich in its appearance (the price is also about 2/3 of the other one, while having roughly the same size, 5.5 meters).

daiquiri
10-21-2009, 04:55 AM
It doesn't appear to me that the two examples shown have the same hull type. The first one might appear like a john boat or a whaler, but we really can't see neither the bow nor the bottom.
Anyways, though english is not my native language, I can say that "launch" is a general therm which comprises different types of motorboats - so I believe you're safe to call it a launch.
Incidentally, the second one looks more like what we usually refer to as a (traditional) launch - a fine-entry bow, an inboard engine, designed for comfortable transportation of passengers in protected waters.

apex1
10-21-2009, 05:45 AM
Well we sell them as Admirals launches since ages, and so the customers enquiries say, just launch or....................yes!
There is a wide variety of hull forms in the Netherlands, because they have been just the work boats or rescue boats from large ships originally.


here is a less luxurious one, and a smaller example too.

Arvy
10-21-2009, 06:17 AM
@daiquiri: like I said, the first example picture was quite a bad one. The second are more like how the general hull looks like althoug as Apex1 said the hulls over here vary quite a lot. Actually the shape is almost the same, but due to the hood (shelter in the front made from fabric laid down on the foredeck) makes the hull looks like having a flat bow instead of a sharper one.

@Apex1,

So admirals launch or just launch it is (maybe depending on the luxury it is admirals or not). The pictures you show are the exact type of boat I mean! And indeed in the netherlands they all have a common name with different kind of hull forms.

Thanks all.

Tiny Turnip
10-21-2009, 01:51 PM
And just to confuse things, after your first picture, in England, the very popular boat below is a Dell Quay *Dory*
Generally regarded as *based on* the Boston Whaler.

Arvy
10-22-2009, 01:49 AM
Well Tiny Turnip, that picture shows an entirely different kind of boat :) but I can understand that you think it might be this kind of boat after seeing my first picture.

Submarine Tom
10-22-2009, 02:56 AM
TT

How do you get anywhere in such a tiny bit of water?

Tom

apex1
10-22-2009, 04:31 AM
TT

How do you get anywhere is such a tiny bit of water?

Tom

Oh at "full throttle" I would guess he makes some distance. Did you notice the wheels?

tkk
10-22-2009, 08:52 AM
But the barrel with water needs to be on the trailer as well. Otherwise his propeller will start aerating very soon :D

Tiny Turnip
10-22-2009, 05:43 PM
That 'bucket' is properly known as 'the Lake District.' limited to 10knts, otherwise we would be swamped by pistnbroke with his 40knt jetski...

Submarine Tom
10-23-2009, 02:32 AM
TT,

I'll correct you before PB does:

It's not a jet ski... see the prop!

Tom

Tiny Turnip
10-23-2009, 03:15 AM
Sorry! you're quite right- read PB and his 40Knt PWC.
outboard testing day traditionally falls on the day after bin collection day. when the bin wagon has gone past, you amble down the street and choose the cleanest wheelie bin to borrow from your neighbours for an hour or so...

View Full Version : How is this kind of boat called in english?