Subject: RE: [harryproa] Re:: Flat bottom hulls?
From: "'Peter Southwood' peter.southwood@telkomsa.net [harryproa]"
Date: 3/15/2019, 2:27 AM
To: <harryproa@yahoogroups.com.au>
Reply-to:
harryproa@yahoogroups.com.au

 

Double bottom is a safety feature on many large commercial vessels, so it is used. They are also usually flat bottoms, both inside and out.  Really nice if you get a hole in your bottom that the water stops at the inner bottom. Does it happen often?  Not so much. If you go for a thicker core and a bit of Kevlar in the inner skin, it is unlikely that most impacts will cause uncontrollable flooding. Bilges are shit places to store stuff, as if they are easy to access, they will get water in from the top, and are a bitch to keep clean and dry and smelling acceptable, and are usually a terrible shape for storage and cleaning They tend to be a place where the water pipes and electrical cabling get put in close proximity. Not a bad place for tankage, but this also has its problems. Cheers, Peter

 

From: harryproa@yahoogroups.com.au [mailto:harryproa@yahoogroups.com.au]
Sent: 15 March 2019 01:47
To: Harryproa
Subject: Re: [harryproa] Re:: Flat bottom hulls?

 

 



| Another thing to consider about V bottom and round bottom hulls is the value of the bilge space.   A flat bottom offers little or no useful space in the bilge for tankage, and other stowage....

What horse crap! If you see huge value in a bilge, add a fake one. It is hella cheaper to add a removable floor to an easy to build cheap and light hull.

| This is not insignificant, as deep down is the ideal location for such thing as liquids and batteries, and other heavy stuff.  Built in tankage is also insurance if you run onto a coral head, and rip into the bottom......

Ya, all the guys checking the latest boats are all checking out the critically important BILGE volume.

| it can prevent the main hull(s) from flooding.  The entire bilge in a Deep V or round bottom hull could be sealed, with watertight access ports, and ideally each bulkhead would make a separate compartment without any connection to the adjacent compartments.

I don't know any sailors looking for water tight bilge as a safety feature. But, perhaps I can learn a thing. I would imagine the crush zones on the HP would take the hit fine. And are probably are considered by most as a kind of belts and suspenders protection, but I don't know

Does any list reader care to instruct me in the value of a water tight bilge?

 

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Posted by: "Peter Southwood" <peter.southwood@telkomsa..net>
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