lockhughes
06-18-2002, 02:15 AM
Hello all... my first post in these BoatDesign.net forums...pleased to be aboard.
My efforts to sway my sailing club from displacement diesel to an electric pontoon-type craft as a replacement for our aging Club tender (40-passenger private ferry boat) have been for nought, so this has ended up somewhat academic... but here goes -
I have set up a little Yahoo Group thingee at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/QCYCTender/
where you can read the "design parameters" (I guess they're called) for the Clubs tender, but there's one aspect of pontoon craft I have no clue about. Here's a message I posted there (that Yahoo group), to explain:
Gets back to figuring whether a third hull provides a net
benefit, as the 48-passenger thingee had a third, which I hadn't
imagined - thought it'd be still two-pontoon thingee..
Thought at first, three hulls bad, but have re-thought. How `bout
making the outer hulls a little bigger, but keep the middle pontoon smaller, so when lightly loaded, the middle hull lifts clear of the water?
Seems to me that'd put a little nuckle in the "bouyancy curve"
(something like that)? Cut some wetted surface when you can, maybe save fuel? And the extra bouyancy/wetted surface would kick in when the outer hulls got loaded up, so to speak. The centre hull would still help keep the boat stiff. Maybe the place to set up the batteries - centerline?
===== end of my message ======
It's this idea of a smaller centre hull, which doesn't come into play until the craft is loaded up to a point, which I am curious about. Has anyone ever heard of such an approach? Are there obvious disadvantages? Nothing to gain of any significance? I'm just a recreational sailor, but have been sailing beach cats and reading many things about Multi's for years. This might be something new and good, but I'm suspicious - `specially since I dreamed this one up muself <grin>
Thanks in advance, for any replies!
Cheers
Lock
Tornado KC234 "High Heels"
QCYC
Wards Island, Toronto harbour
My efforts to sway my sailing club from displacement diesel to an electric pontoon-type craft as a replacement for our aging Club tender (40-passenger private ferry boat) have been for nought, so this has ended up somewhat academic... but here goes -
I have set up a little Yahoo Group thingee at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/QCYCTender/
where you can read the "design parameters" (I guess they're called) for the Clubs tender, but there's one aspect of pontoon craft I have no clue about. Here's a message I posted there (that Yahoo group), to explain:
Gets back to figuring whether a third hull provides a net
benefit, as the 48-passenger thingee had a third, which I hadn't
imagined - thought it'd be still two-pontoon thingee..
Thought at first, three hulls bad, but have re-thought. How `bout
making the outer hulls a little bigger, but keep the middle pontoon smaller, so when lightly loaded, the middle hull lifts clear of the water?
Seems to me that'd put a little nuckle in the "bouyancy curve"
(something like that)? Cut some wetted surface when you can, maybe save fuel? And the extra bouyancy/wetted surface would kick in when the outer hulls got loaded up, so to speak. The centre hull would still help keep the boat stiff. Maybe the place to set up the batteries - centerline?
===== end of my message ======
It's this idea of a smaller centre hull, which doesn't come into play until the craft is loaded up to a point, which I am curious about. Has anyone ever heard of such an approach? Are there obvious disadvantages? Nothing to gain of any significance? I'm just a recreational sailor, but have been sailing beach cats and reading many things about Multi's for years. This might be something new and good, but I'm suspicious - `specially since I dreamed this one up muself <grin>
Thanks in advance, for any replies!
Cheers
Lock
Tornado KC234 "High Heels"
QCYC
Wards Island, Toronto harbour