by Chad » Tue Apr 26, 2011 9:47 pm
This all depends on what you want to achieve- "just" flotation, or the ability to recover and continue home without help. The proposed rule is aimed only at preventing boats sinking to the bottom. If you want additional protection for your boat, then additional flotation should be fitted.
The materials that make up the boat will displace about 6 cubic feet of volume, which at water's density of 64#/cubic foot will be providing about 400 pounds of flotation, against the boat's 800 pound target weight (just round numbers here, salt is different than fresh water, and most boats will weigh more than 800#, and most will also be built from materials that displace a little more than 6 cubic feet).
The rule added about 50% to the flotation requirement beyond the 400# deficit, rounded to the nearest whole cubic foot. This amount of flotation should keep the shear just above the water, if there isn't any crew standing in/on the boat.
To recover from a capsize and swamping, crew will likely need to stand on the boat to bail it out, and this would require additional flotation- about 3 cubic feet per crew person. All the flotation also needs to be substantially below the lowest deck opening to keep the water from flowing back in.
Also remember that the flotation needs to be distributed fore and aft- placing it all in the area behind F169 will allow the bow to sink until the boat stands bow down and almost vertical, for instance. Best bet (until somebody does some real life testing) is to place the flotation so that forward moment and the aft moment are equal, assuming a CG around f110. So (bow flotation X distance to f110) should approximately equal (stern flotation X distance to f110).
I'll have a look at the bunk volume of a standard boat and get back to you those numbers.
Last edited by
Chad on Fri Apr 29, 2011 7:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.