Hull Design Project

Discussion in 'Boat Design' started by BWJF, Mar 4, 2005.

  1. BWJF
    Joined: Mar 2005
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    Location: Vancouver, Canada

    BWJF New Member

    Hi everyone

    I am a student at the Fisheries and Marine Institute of Memorial University. I have to design a ship in my third year and I have decided to design a 20 metre ocean going motor yacht. I am thinking about a 5m Beam and a 1.5-2.0 m draft. Will some please enlighten me about good L/B and B/T ratios and good block and prismatic coefficients that will keep resistance to a minimum and enhance seakeeping characteristics. Also, it would be greatly appreciated if someone could point me to a good systematic series or regression analysis to acurately predict the resistance for this type of hull.

    Thanks

    BWJF
     
  2. gonzo
    Joined: Aug 2002
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    Location: Milwaukee, WI

    gonzo Senior Member

    There is no proper answer. Boats are complex designs that involve many aspects. If you really have no idea, maybe the first thing is to read some basic textbooks. For example, "Elements of Yacht Design", "Principles of Yacht Design", "Elements of Strenght" and The Common Sense of Yacht Design". Without the basic knowledge any advice would be useless.
     
  3. CDBarry
    Joined: Nov 2002
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    Location: Maryland

    CDBarry Senior Member

    I've judged a number of student projects at the USNA and the USCGA.

    The key elements are:

    1) Determining requirements
    2) Determining key parameters (length, etc.) to meet the requirements.

    Don't be pulling things like length, beam etc. out of thin air - you need a rational process to get there - essentially a ship synthesis approach. This is relatively straight forward with spreadsheets, but you have to do it in a rational manner.

    Then you can start determining the fine points afterwards, otherwise you will just churn around in circles - also your proffesor know this as well, and will be, first and foremost, looking for a reasoned approach, even for a yacht.
     
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