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View Poll Results: Does the process of producing a complete design invariably involve compromise?
Yes - compromise is an integral part of the design spiral 37 97.37%
No - Every aspect of a design can be the optimum 1 2.63%
Voters: 38. You may not vote on this poll

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  #1  
Old 03-15-2010, 04:10 AM
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Willallison Willallison is offline
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Compromise

I am at my witts end trying to explain to Rick Willoughby that the process of finding the optimum solution to any yacht design process invariably involves compromise.
He is convinced that every project can be an amalgum of the the 'best of both worlds' (my words, not his)

More on the subject (much more, sorry) here, starting with post 96:

economical coastal cruiser

Please... either come to my defense, or put me out of my misery....
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  #2  
Old 03-15-2010, 07:33 AM
Obsession Obsession is offline
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Maybe the other poster is looking at compromise as in "A concession to something detrimental or pejorative" vs. "Something that combines qualities or elements of different things" - if you want to you can see compromise as a negative connotation (like "rot compromised the strength of the deck" or budget compromised the quality of the boat) But I read compromise as you intended it... as in compromise = balance all the factors to optimize the whole, which is fundamental to any recreational/cruising boat I know of. It would be nice though if I could have the ultimate wave crusher that was also the ultimate fuel efficient, largest accommodation, best headroom, shallowest draft, cheapest slip, and fastest speed all in one with no compromises or pesky "balance" between objectives necessary
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Old 03-15-2010, 07:38 AM
Oyster Oyster is offline
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Generally speaking here I will speak about my own experiences. "Compromises" by any meaning requires a baseline both in common sense and fact based evidence to judge a particular item. In the area of boats, I have personally witnessed fools have neither. Have you ever witnessed folks that attempt to put twenty pounds in a five pound recycled bag at the grocery store, especially two of the gallon milk jugs?
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Old 03-15-2010, 07:46 AM
SamSam SamSam is offline
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I read a little and am familiar with his reasoning. Ad Hoc put it pretty good. It seems to be a question of semantics. Your crappy compromise is his brilliant solution. Just know that when he takes the ball and goes home, you have obviously been proven wrong.
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Old 03-15-2010, 08:01 AM
tom28571 tom28571 is offline
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Will,

Every reasonable person knows this. Only occasionally there is the unreasonable one that will insist that everybody else get on his wagon.
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  #6  
Old 03-15-2010, 11:26 AM
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I think there is a bit too much weight being placed on two words: compromise and optimize. As if they never mean the same thing, which they often do.

The way you put it in your question its clear. But the way its been discussed its not so distinct. From my reading, I understand Rick to be saying the exact same thing as your "Yes" question, but he (still properly IMHO) uses the word "optimize" instead of "compromise".

To my reading and understanding, Rick is simply "optimizing" across several factors. You call that "compromise" while I agree with Rick that "optimize" is still the appropriate term.

I never internalized Rick saying he was suggesting your "No" statement, that a proper design results with all factors are at their individual optimum. Certainly, the designs he has built (his actions) do not support your belief that Rick is making such a claim.

This seems to be simply a misunderstanding, and not an actual difference.
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Old 03-15-2010, 12:11 PM
tom28571 tom28571 is offline
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u4ea32,

I think we all understand what the words optimize and compromise mean. To optimize a design in one characteristic inevitably requires that some compromise must be taken in some other characteristic. For instance, I challenge anyone to optimize a boat hull design for both high and low speed.
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Old 03-15-2010, 12:20 PM
fcfc fcfc is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by u4ea32 View Post
From my reading, I understand Rick to be saying the exact same thing as your "Yes" question, but he (still properly IMHO) uses the word "optimize" instead of "compromise".

To my reading and understanding, Rick is simply "optimizing" across several factors. You call that "compromise" while I agree with Rick that "optimize" is still the appropriate term.
No, I am note sure.

When Rick is saying "optimize", he is using mathematical variables, and nothing else exists.

When Will is saying "compromize", he is also using mathematical variables, but he is also using a bunch of parameters with no formal mathematical value. (Should I say experience driven ?).

Example : optimizing a propeller diameter for efficiency. For Rick, two figures only and nothing else : propeller diameter and efficiency, and it is just a mathematical curve.

For Will choosing a acceptable compromise for propeller diameter and efficiency : he will look at these two figures, but will also look at a bunch of other considerations not formally mathematically written : Availability of the propeller, cost of the propeller, acceptance for the customer of the draft, noise created by propeller, reliability of the propeller subsystem, damage tolerance of the propeller, etc ...
  #9  
Old 03-15-2010, 01:05 PM
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kach22i kach22i is offline
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"Balance" is the word I'd use but "compromise" is good too.

How about "optimized balance of compromises"?
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  #10  
Old 03-15-2010, 01:42 PM
tom28571 tom28571 is offline
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Originally Posted by fcfc View Post
No, I am note sure.

When Rick is saying "optimize", he is using mathematical variables, and nothing else exists.

When Will is saying "compromize", he is also using mathematical variables, but he is also using a bunch of parameters with no formal mathematical value. (Should I say experience driven ?).

Example : optimizing a propeller diameter for efficiency. For Rick, two figures only and nothing else : propeller diameter and efficiency, and it is just a mathematical curve.

For Will choosing a acceptable compromise for propeller diameter and efficiency : he will look at these two figures, but will also look at a bunch of other considerations not formally mathematically written : Availability of the propeller, cost of the propeller, acceptance for the customer of the draft, noise created by propeller, reliability of the propeller subsystem, damage tolerance of the propeller, etc ...
Good synopsis. Both have value but to generate a design that will be of practical use, the second must take precedence.
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  #11  
Old 03-15-2010, 04:49 PM
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Willallison Willallison is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kach22i View Post
How about "optimized balance of compromises"?
Your tallent is wasted on us mere mortals Kach!
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  #12  
Old 03-15-2010, 05:13 PM
Ilan Voyager Ilan Voyager is offline
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That rejoins the praxis and logos philosophical question. Yes any person with some common sense (I mean practical intelligence) knows that in any design he has to compromise with a lot of mathematical and non-mathematical parameters.
As my pro experience has been in work boats (even a warship is a work boat...), the first compromise is with cost. So the main quest for me is how to get the best (or optimized) and simplest solution to a design problem...a kind of MISS or Occam's razor principle.
After this first premise, the requisites of the ship (or any object) being defined, all the technical solutions will derive rationally. Evidently the degree of sophistication of the solutions is proportional to the complexity of the requisites.
  #13  
Old 03-15-2010, 05:42 PM
dskira dskira is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Willallison View Post
I am at my witts end trying to explain to Rick Willoughby that the process of finding the optimum solution to any yacht design process invariably involves compromise.
He is convinced that every project can be an amalgum of the the 'best of both worlds' (my words, not his)

More on the subject (much more, sorry) here, starting with post 96:

economical coastal cruiser

Please... either come to my defense, or put me out of my misery....
Already "optimum solution" is a compromise. You can't have everything, something has to go or come. Starting with the list of priorities, the economics by itself ask for compromises, the feasibility, the supply possibilities, the changes in circumstances coming in during the initial phase of the design, all that are compromises.
And as a naval architect if I promess my client I will design the optimum solution of his or her desire, I will lie, because it is impossible.
Even Rick will change his own mind in three year about what is the optimum boat for himself. Its call research and development. What looks perfect now is not perfect tomorrow. So we HAVE to COMPROMISE. Not doing it is ignorance, and closing the door to better solutions on a given problem on a futur design.
We can't resolve all the problems on a yacht, we have to decide which one is just a waste of time, which one worst more development and so on. We compromise.
And as I said, perhaps even not knowing it Rick had already compromise on his own design. Who knows! I hope!
And who can define the "best"
The sea is the ultimate judge, jury, and executioner. Better not be to arrogant.
My two cents anyway
Daniel
  #14  
Old 03-15-2010, 05:51 PM
dskira dskira is offline
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In yacht design, the mathematics are a tool, like hammer on the boat building, not a finality. You need it, but you control it. You don't let the formulas to control you.
They are part of experiences and research, we should use them with caution and knowledge, not as carve in stone to be followed blindly.
When you are in North Atlantic in a winter storm, you pray you were right with the mathematics, but also with your general knowledge of what works and what don't!
Daniel
  #15  
Old 03-15-2010, 06:00 PM
Tanton Tanton is offline
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I prefer the word "choice".
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