Gludy
Well-Known Member
The saloon roof is the floor and flooded but not flooded all the way.
The buoyancy built into the saloon roof is very high and water level is such that there is a small gap between the saloon floor and the water level.
Keep in mind that the floor of the saloon is well below hull top deck level so the upside down hulls would have to be submerged a long way to drown out the saloon.
This was one of my very early questions in the path to a multihull sailing boat.
There are no modern multihull sailing boats that i know of that have the full height bulkheads and nor do they need them. The foam sandwich hulls and saloon roof are very buoyant ... honest /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
It interesting that you started with the same questions that i did when I looked at these boats - maybe because I had just come from looking at the PC Power Multihull.
The buoyancy built into the saloon roof is very high and water level is such that there is a small gap between the saloon floor and the water level.
Keep in mind that the floor of the saloon is well below hull top deck level so the upside down hulls would have to be submerged a long way to drown out the saloon.
This was one of my very early questions in the path to a multihull sailing boat.
There are no modern multihull sailing boats that i know of that have the full height bulkheads and nor do they need them. The foam sandwich hulls and saloon roof are very buoyant ... honest /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
It interesting that you started with the same questions that i did when I looked at these boats - maybe because I had just come from looking at the PC Power Multihull.