Jeff
02-28-2002, 05:06 AM
This may be old news to some of the folks here, but I just revisited the German Powerboats site and found the design of thier GP 43 to be quite interesting and refreshingly different from the norm.
The design of the new GP 43 is based on a simple hydrodynamic principle: Smooth surfaces which glide over or are immersed in the water in a horizontal (surf-board- like) fashion, will allow the highest speeds because the load is distributed uniformly across a small surface area. And this is exactly the approach we use: the smaller the area which is wetted by water, the less friction there will be, and the higher the speed to which the boat can be accelerated.
On the other hand, how will these plane surfaces behave when the boat turns a curve or when loads apply at an oblique angle as with the dashing of waves? In conditions such as these, the smoothness of a surface is not enough. Hence we devided the continous surface into a multitude of small surface sections, set off in height and interconnected by vertical sections. The horizontal surface sections are for gliding and will enable the boat to move at high speeds, where as the vertical rigid ones provide "gliding contours" to deal with curves and lateral loads. With this design, major improvements could be achieved: a maximum amount of the energy is available for propulsion and extremely effective lateral traction is ensured. While you may be feeling the accelerating forces in curves very strongly yourself, the boat is still far from swinging or from reaching its maximum loading capacity.
Their website is at http://www.german-powerboats.de/english/english.html or (http://www.german-powerboats.de)
The design of the new GP 43 is based on a simple hydrodynamic principle: Smooth surfaces which glide over or are immersed in the water in a horizontal (surf-board- like) fashion, will allow the highest speeds because the load is distributed uniformly across a small surface area. And this is exactly the approach we use: the smaller the area which is wetted by water, the less friction there will be, and the higher the speed to which the boat can be accelerated.
On the other hand, how will these plane surfaces behave when the boat turns a curve or when loads apply at an oblique angle as with the dashing of waves? In conditions such as these, the smoothness of a surface is not enough. Hence we devided the continous surface into a multitude of small surface sections, set off in height and interconnected by vertical sections. The horizontal surface sections are for gliding and will enable the boat to move at high speeds, where as the vertical rigid ones provide "gliding contours" to deal with curves and lateral loads. With this design, major improvements could be achieved: a maximum amount of the energy is available for propulsion and extremely effective lateral traction is ensured. While you may be feeling the accelerating forces in curves very strongly yourself, the boat is still far from swinging or from reaching its maximum loading capacity.
Their website is at http://www.german-powerboats.de/english/english.html or (http://www.german-powerboats.de)