Willallison
Senior Member
Tom,
I've posted the lines for the boat at
http://www.boatdesign.net/gallery/showphoto.php?photo=707
I took a look at the images that I posted before, and I think you may be right - they probably give a slightly distorted view of the boat. The section lines for instance, are straight, whereas in the other images they appear concave.
You will see that the lines run straight for about the last half of the boat. Fwd of this the fairbody sweeps up towards the bow before turning fairly abruptly, as you noted, to meet the stem.
I wanted to keep the forward sections as deep as possible in order to minimise slamming when running into a choppy sea - hence the quite sharp change from stem to keel. By sweeping the bow sections up as I have, I would expect them to run almost free of the water in callm conditions, but still allow the boat to 'slice' through a moderate chop without having to slow too much. A time will come where the boat becomes uncomfortable at high speed - and like you I like a boat which can still run at intermediate speeds without falling off the plane. Hence the flatter aft sections.
The fairbody's upsweep also serves to help keep the bow higher in a following sea - and in effect produces a sort of rocker in the bottom as you refer to in the Carolina boats.
Any further thoughts?
I've posted the lines for the boat at
http://www.boatdesign.net/gallery/showphoto.php?photo=707
I took a look at the images that I posted before, and I think you may be right - they probably give a slightly distorted view of the boat. The section lines for instance, are straight, whereas in the other images they appear concave.
You will see that the lines run straight for about the last half of the boat. Fwd of this the fairbody sweeps up towards the bow before turning fairly abruptly, as you noted, to meet the stem.
I wanted to keep the forward sections as deep as possible in order to minimise slamming when running into a choppy sea - hence the quite sharp change from stem to keel. By sweeping the bow sections up as I have, I would expect them to run almost free of the water in callm conditions, but still allow the boat to 'slice' through a moderate chop without having to slow too much. A time will come where the boat becomes uncomfortable at high speed - and like you I like a boat which can still run at intermediate speeds without falling off the plane. Hence the flatter aft sections.
The fairbody's upsweep also serves to help keep the bow higher in a following sea - and in effect produces a sort of rocker in the bottom as you refer to in the Carolina boats.
Any further thoughts?