CrawfW
New Member
Wow, for once it seems like i have found a topic that interests others! The only downside now is that i am about to reveal myself as someone doing this on a Friday night, as opposed to earlier when "WFH"......
Still, have really enjoyed reading the comments. Especially:
Picking out a few other bits......
This is a particularly interesting point: the way in which alignment with Detroit brought down the price to enable American Suburbia to add boats to their possessions. I guess the UK issue is then that most of our water is salty and sometimes rather lumpy.
I am not a particular fan of the E-type. Jaguar made some great cars – and engines – but the E-type has always seemed a little over-rated. A very great regret is not buying a Miura when they were still out of fashion, though it wouldn’t have been for the handling especially. Won’t ever afford one now!
And getting back to the main point - with extra questions......
1. Is the book in Portofino's photo still the key one to read? I would love to understand - at amateur level - the specifics of boat architecture, so that I could see how much they vary. Is the book in the picture still the right one?!
I would love to be able to give myself approximate answers to questions - (which would also be phrased better !) like "how many fewer HP does a flat-bottom planer of X feet need compared to a deep-V for a given speed". Geek.
2. Still, i am not completely alone........
This is exactly the sort of thing i too an keen to understand. Does anyone know if Regal's is a good version of a stepped hull?! Was it ~15 years ago that stepped hulls became mainstream?
3. Did Deep-Vs ever get to the mainstream after the 60s, or were they always "specials" for the Cowes-Torquay sort of thing?
Better stop there. Not least, because the quote text is making my head spin.....
Still, have really enjoyed reading the comments. Especially:
Brilliant question. Yes and no on so many different levels but I think this will be a magnificent thread![]()
Picking out a few other bits......
Even cutting edge technology like electric drivetrains are available in boats...probably since the 60’s when Ray Hunt was designing hulls and Volvo built the first outdrive so that car engines could comfortably go in boats...which all led to the American suburban family being able to have a boat on their drive...I think boats and cars have been in lockstep
This is a particularly interesting point: the way in which alignment with Detroit brought down the price to enable American Suburbia to add boats to their possessions. I guess the UK issue is then that most of our water is salty and sometimes rather lumpy.
In terms of performance and seakeeping, No !
The fundamentals of a deep V and Hp thatRay hunt , Sony Levi , Don Aronow, Amarti( Itama ) Theodali ( sp ) Magnum , + sone others omitted from this list because I have forgotten…are the same .
What has changed is the demographics of the buyer a shift from seakeeping / ride / performance to floating apartment.
Not criticising btw , holster your weapons folks just saying it as it’s it .
This accommodation maxing out and easy entry into boating with manoeuvring aids via IPS + other electrotwackery ( with shafts ) means the advent of mid cabins , V drives on shafts and a loss of seakeeping, or a nudge away from could be bettered if the weight was more fwd giving a better balance .
There are still a few niche builders focusing on seakeeping via deep V s and massive Hp motors .By deep V I am using the correct in naval architecture circles of in excess of a 20 degree deadrise , You are looking at Otam , Itama ,Magnum as examples. With deadrises pretty much where Sony Levi , Ray Hunt , Aronow were back in the day .
I am not a particular fan of the E-type. Jaguar made some great cars – and engines – but the E-type has always seemed a little over-rated. A very great regret is not buying a Miura when they were still out of fashion, though it wouldn’t have been for the handling especially. Won’t ever afford one now!
And getting back to the main point - with extra questions......
1. Is the book in Portofino's photo still the key one to read? I would love to understand - at amateur level - the specifics of boat architecture, so that I could see how much they vary. Is the book in the picture still the right one?!
I would love to be able to give myself approximate answers to questions - (which would also be phrased better !) like "how many fewer HP does a flat-bottom planer of X feet need compared to a deep-V for a given speed". Geek.
2. Still, i am not completely alone........
back on the subject of planing boats - when did stepped hulls become more mainstream? think its only recently (last 10-15 years) that they've started being used on cuddy cabin sports boats (think regal use a stepped hull, no idea whether its a good implementation of a stepped hull or poor) and cheaper stuff. before that they were the preserve of the go fast american boats - your 70mph plus stuff.
I think a 25 foot fairey will still be better (by better I mean maintain a higher average speed in a given chop) than your average 25 foot american cuddy cabin though, would be an interesting test though.
This is exactly the sort of thing i too an keen to understand. Does anyone know if Regal's is a good version of a stepped hull?! Was it ~15 years ago that stepped hulls became mainstream?
3. Did Deep-Vs ever get to the mainstream after the 60s, or were they always "specials" for the Cowes-Torquay sort of thing?
Better stop there. Not least, because the quote text is making my head spin.....