
...can't figure how to download pic's ,,,but here's a link to a few on 'flikr'..
..............click on pic's to enlarge,,below for some comments
http://www.flickr.com/photos/59103003@N ... 076955693/
jray wrote:Great shots of the mods, looks like you are getting close to finishing up. Funny looking dogs though!
slowpoke wrote:I've often wondered if the keel and bulb were in fact too far back in this design. Every picture I've ever seen shows a problem with weight too far back, and even the drawings seem a little off. One of the problems with buying plans drawn by an amateur boat designer using an off-the-shelf cad program. This is where Chad's weight conservation comes in handy, as it allows him the ability to place ballast forward without penalizing himself. I think an extra 100# forward might do the job, maybe someone with a completed boat might try and see!!!
Chad wrote:Remembering the intent of this rule as it was written, the goal is to keep the feet of the inward-facing hiking crew aft of 106" from the transom. As mentioned elsewhere, one method originally discussed was to limit hiking strap attachment to this distance. This background, together with the definition of cockpit:
cockpit: "a sunken, open area, generally in the after part of a small vessel, as a yacht, providing space for the pilot, part or all of the crew, or guests."
...would seem to make the geometry of the cabin top unrelated to the cockpit rule. As I read it, the "sunken, open area" or cockpit floor needs to stop at 106" from the transom. I suspect a class measurer would accept a number of ways to meet the intent of the rule, if the geometry of the actual boat did not...
Chad wrote:The original rocker thread, with some of the same points (and I'll reiterate here the 5" variance you describe is actually twice the actual rocker delta):
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=114
I'd be curious how the pdx boat with the deliberately enhanced rocker fares with the "tyvek test". I recall when testing Ben's boat, the chine very closely matched the designed hull panel curve. I recall Ben didn't use a jig at all, just the stitch er together and go for it method.
I suspect that members of this class (and even Watershed?) would prefer to keep that as an acceptable build method since it helps promote the "easy to build" aspect of the boat. Any new rocker requirement would pretty much require build cradles or jigs. I would never build without one, but it seems a little contrary to the spirit of the class to require one...
Don't know how to reconcile rocker limits and the desire for jigless construction.
...we are experimenting with hull shapes as allowed by the current rules. We have built a boat that is significantly flatter (fore to aft) than the plans, but still fits within the printed rules. We are finishing a hull that will be shaped as per the plans fore to aft, but will have significantly more rocker from side-to-side. Again, both will measure to the current rule, but will have significantly different hull shapes below the water line.
Chad wrote:
I'm going to go sand now.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests