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#1
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Hello Group,
has anyone out there converted an old lifeboat into something like a 'Canal Boat'? I am working with a 26 foot aluminium hull. Presently building a cabin to make it so i can spend some time on the boat, with berths and cooking facilities etc. I have an older 18 horse Yanmar diesel to install. I understand that I will need some ballast to keep the boat from bobbing like a cork. Question: what kind of ballast? Cement? and how much? Thanks in advance! Ingmar |
#2
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I used concreate test cors. They wer free from the test center.
Mike *********** Hello Group, has anyone out there converted an old lifeboat into something like a 'Canal Boat'? I am working with a 26 foot aluminium hull. Presently building a cabin to make it so i can spend some time on the boat, with berths and cooking facilities etc. I have an older 18 horse Yanmar diesel to install. I understand that I will need some ballast to keep the boat from bobbing like a cork. Question: what kind of ballast? Cement? and how much? Thanks in advance! Ingmar |
#3
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Hi
"ingmar" skrev i en meddelelse om... Hello Group, has anyone out there converted an old lifeboat into something like a 'Canal Boat'? I am working with a 26 foot aluminium hull. Presently building a cabin to make it so i can spend some time on the boat, with berths and cooking facilities etc. I have an older 18 horse Yanmar diesel to install. I understand that I will need some ballast to keep the boat from bobbing like a cork. Question: what kind of ballast? Cement? and how much? Thanks in advance! Ingmar What you realy must consider, is the hull ability to stop rolling. As if you place all ballast ,so it kind of keep rolling from one side to another like a pendul in a clock, -------- no great idea most often caused by all the ballast placed at the bottom in the middle of the boat. Best way to avoid this, is to divide the ballast in 3 ; one third at the low bottom, and each orher third as near the waterline and as far "out" , each side of the hull. The reullt is, that the parts of the ballast at the waterline will move up-down and not make the hull swing from side to side whenever rolled. P.C. With boats like that, you must emagine how |
#4
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This is a really interesting suggestion.
I have had a number of compatriots at sea that did not not wotking on tankers. Tankers are Very Stable. So, they come upright very fast and hard. Passenger vessels are the opposite, the reason the roll is slow (and more confortable to some) is that they have little righting force and so return to upright slowly and gently. Down side is the ship's crew must be very aware of the G.M. on a continues basis. Without an accruate table of the weight and moment that you are adding and the full set of LD curves for that hull, you have no way to know how much ballast you will end up needing. If the hull still has its tags, It will tell you interesting numbers, but you probably do not want to set it down to its maximum load waterline. Decide what draft you want to have, and mark the hull there, have as many of your friends there as you can when you launch, and have them get on until you are near the marks. Tally the weight as they get off. Good Luck Guy Matt Colie A.Sloop "Bonne Ide'e" S2-7.9 #1 Lifelong Waterman, Licensed Mariner and Pathological Sailor P.C. wrote: Hi "ingmar" skrev i en meddelelse om... Hello Group, has anyone out there converted an old lifeboat into something like a 'Canal Boat'? I am working with a 26 foot aluminium hull. Presently building a cabin to make it so i can spend some time on the boat, with berths and cooking facilities etc. I have an older 18 horse Yanmar diesel to install. I understand that I will need some ballast to keep the boat from bobbing like a cork. Question: what kind of ballast? Cement? and how much? Thanks in advance! Ingmar What you realy must consider, is the hull ability to stop rolling. As if you place all ballast ,so it kind of keep rolling from one side to another like a pendul in a clock, -------- no great idea most often caused by all the ballast placed at the bottom in the middle of the boat. Best way to avoid this, is to divide the ballast in 3 ; one third at the low bottom, and each orher third as near the waterline and as far "out" , each side of the hull. The reullt is, that the parts of the ballast at the waterline will move up-down and not make the hull swing from side to side whenever rolled. P.C. With boats like that, you must emagine how |
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