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  #1  
Old 06-15-2005, 08:06 PM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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Collaborative Dinghy Design

I was searching around the forums and found a relatively old thread about dinghy design by Tim. Anyone up for a collaborative (Option-1/2 esqe) online design? Post away...(The idea is to create a sailing dinghy well under 20', certainly)
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Old 06-15-2005, 08:13 PM
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lewisboats lewisboats is offline
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Pram, FlatIron, Sharpie?

Steve
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  #3  
Old 06-15-2005, 09:35 PM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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What does everybody like best? (Please define...)
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=/\= A sailing Trekkie!=/\=
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  #4  
Old 06-16-2005, 02:15 AM
Packeteer Packeteer is offline
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must be cheap and easy to construct
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  #5  
Old 06-16-2005, 02:24 AM
Packeteer Packeteer is offline
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Sailing Dinghy Design

previous thread on dinghy design with lots of info ^^
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Old 06-16-2005, 05:41 PM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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I realize that. That's the thread I found inspiration from. Well, I'd go for a boat with Laser-performance and comfort of a keelboat. What about a 12-16' boat with a small keel?
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at great expense (it's fun though)
=/\= A sailing Trekkie!=/\=
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Old 06-17-2005, 09:51 AM
Alixander Beck Alixander Beck is offline
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I like the idea of a small keel. it can then have a fixed rudder and a nice clean transom.
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  #8  
Old 06-17-2005, 01:56 PM
Tim B Tim B is offline
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THanks, MacKid, I was aware that it was there, but two important issues arose from it...

Firstly, no-one wanted to ( or had the money to) put money behind an untested idea.

Secondly, The whole thread deviates somewhat in the last pages.

If you can keep it cheap you'll probably do very well. One thing that will help here is to use a rig from an existing yacht, rather than trying to piece one together.

Anyway, go for it, and I'll help if I can.
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  #9  
Old 06-17-2005, 06:06 PM
Paul B Paul B is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mackid068
I was searching around the forums and found a relatively old thread about dinghy design by Tim. Anyone up for a collaborative (Option-1/2 esqe) online design? Post away...(The idea is to create a sailing dinghy well under 20', certainly)
You'll need to be very structured in what this is supposed to be, otherwise you will end up with too many ideas that don't fit. Of course you will inevitably be told that you are "nuts" if you don't have it foil or use a canting keel, or both...

Something to consider:

New Design for a 17' Daysailer/Racer
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  #10  
Old 06-17-2005, 07:06 PM
Tactic Tactic is offline
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It will need a canting keel,hydrofoils or it is a complete waste of time.
It should have some patented devices also.
There I just saved all you guys pages of disscussion....
Watch your discussion does not get hijacked..yet again.

Cheers all !
Tactic
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  #11  
Old 06-17-2005, 11:39 PM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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I'm quite nuts. I like old-style boats, Hereshoff H12 1/2 for example.
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Sailing (n.) The art
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at great expense (it's fun though)
=/\= A sailing Trekkie!=/\=
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  #12  
Old 06-18-2005, 03:28 PM
Tim B Tim B is offline
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Woah... there's only one way to sort out what goes on a boat... the budget. If it's too expensive it doesn't get done. Most cost is in the systems and rigging, so if we assume a second-hand rig, then capping the price at say £600 for a 12 footer, £1000 for 15 footer, maybe £2000 for a 20 footer. would be as good as anything. I am assuming that you home-build it here.

Anyway, the point is, why do we "need" extra complexity. The essence of any design is "What does it need to do... and how can we do it best for the least complexity"

Tim B.
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  #13  
Old 06-18-2005, 05:24 PM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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Need to do: Be stable enough for a novice and fast enough for an intermediate sailor or a not as strong (or young-ish) sailor.

Least Complexity: GRP?
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Sailing (n.) The art
of getting wet and going nowhere slowly
at great expense (it's fun though)
=/\= A sailing Trekkie!=/\=
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  #14  
Old 06-18-2005, 11:15 PM
Doug Lord
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Bongo

This boat seems to be similar to what you said you were interested in earlier. Perhaps you could make it less expensive, less high performance or whatever-at least if you spend a little time studying it it could give you a frame of reference.
http://www.sailabongo.com
=============================================

Bongo Specifications
-------------------------
Length::15'-2"4.62
Length Waterline15'-0"4.57
Max Beam 6'-6"1.98m
Waterline Beam 3'-0"0.91 m
Draft:3'-11"1.19 m
Pole Length 3'-6"1.07 m
Displacement 415 fully rigged 189.24kg Ballast100 lbs 45.6 kg
Sail Area Main 112 sq-ft10.40 m^2
1st Reef 87 sq-ft 8.08 m^2
2nd Reef 72 sq-ft6.69 m^2
Spinnaker147 sq-ft13.66 m^2
Jib 19 sq-ft1.77 m^2
Total Crew Weight 120-300 lbs55-137 kg
Manufactures Maximum Recommended Load:Maximum Crew2 crew
(165lb each)2 crew
(75 kg each)Maximum Gear20 lbs 9 kg
Maximum recommended Load for crew and gear350 lbs160 kg
Minimum Crew Weight for capsize recovery110 lbs50 kg

Last edited by Doug Lord : 06-18-2005 at 11:26 PM. Reason: add info
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  #15  
Old 06-19-2005, 12:41 AM
mackid068 mackid068 is offline
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That's a NICE boat.
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Sailing (n.) The art
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at great expense (it's fun though)
=/\= A sailing Trekkie!=/\=
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