Greenheart
Well-Known Member
I always went with...net tonnage (being) the actual weight, and displacement being the weight of the water that is displaced...I was surprised by the earlier statement that the actual weight of the boat and the weight of the water it displaces are the same...
Be surprised if you like, but don't bother to question it. It's pleasingly logical if you think about it...because how could any floating object displace more or fewer litres of water than its own weight in kilos, ashore?
With an aussie girlfriend, I visited Adelaide's port, where an Australian Navy vessel was docked. Mademoiselle said "I can't believe how anything that heavy, can float."
The beautifully simple factor (which I didn't learn at school, and which most kids & adults don't seem to know) is that one litre of water weighs one kilo, and measures 10cmx10cmx10cm - so one cubic metre of water is a thousand litres, and weighs exactly a tonne. If you adopt this thinking when estimating volume beneath the waterline, you simultaneously estimate displacement.
The fact that any floating vessel has a waterline, shows that the water supports it at exactly the point where its weight in kilos is equivalent to the number of litres volume it occupies. Add a specific number of kilos payload, and the boat will displace exactly the same additional number of litres (or cubic decimeters of volume)- which, spread across the floor of the vessel, may only mean a tiny increase in draft - but it still always exactly reflects the litres displaced/kilos weight of the whole.
Registered Tonnage is a measurement which only belongs on the ancient brass tat which adorns the walls of quayside pubs.