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Thread: The March 2012 issue of Westlawn Institute's free journal The Masthead is posted

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  1. #1
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    Default The March 2012 issue of Westlawn Institute's free journal The Masthead is posted

    The March 2012 issue of Westlawn Institute's free online journal, The Masthead, is now posted.

    Highlights in this edition:

    • Westlawn Reaccredited
    • U.S. Park Service Requires ABYC Standards
    • Engine Power Curves
    • Orca3D Tip
    • Wrong Way Martin and Stephens
    • Know It All Answer - On Gasoline Ventilation
    • Know It All Question - On Chainplate Welds
    • Cerny's L'Arche Dinghy
    • On The Drawing Board - Allison and Leech Projects
    • New Ownership at The Boat School
    • Herreshoff Symposium
    • News & Views
    • Training Links & Events
    • Masthead Archives
    • Westlawn Information



    Excerpts:

    Power Curves
    Understanding Engine Power Curves
    By Dave Gerr

    Deep in the bilge of the boat you're designing, building, surveying or repairing is her beating heart-her engine. The recipient of endless tuning, cleaning, and fuss, it's the boat's engine that drives her from anchorage to anchorage. Engines, however, come in a wide array of sizes, shapes, and flavors. Whether you're repowering, determining which propulsion-package option to install in a new boat, trying to optimize performance on an existing boat, or to understand why an engine isn't achieving full rated RPM, good information on engine behavior can seem hard to come by. The key to deciphering engine performance is the performance curves that are included with the engine manufacturer's literature. We'll examine these curves here.

    Westlawn Alumnus Will Allison of Imaginocean Yacht Design
    On The Drawing Board


    C.Way Pty Ltd has tapped Tasmania-based designer Will Allison and his design firm, Imaginocean Yacht Design, to design both a 47 meter motor yacht and its 8 meter tender. The decision to custom build a tender was born out of the need for an attractive, functional day boat that offers protection from the weather, whilst still permitting the enjoyment of water sports. Will Allison says, "There's any number of limousine-style tenders out there: but they are a single use vessel. The objective here was to create a practical boat that would serve as a comfortable tender, but also be suitable for a range of other activities." The result is an edgy-looking 8 meter boat with seating for up to eight guests and crew. IYD employed a combination of aluminum for the hull and structure, with composites for much of the interior, to produce a durable vessel that is also light enough to be lifted onto the aft deck of the mother ship. Hull number one is currently under construction in Hobart and is due to be launched by the middle of 2012.

    Orca3D Tip
    Surface Normals and Hydrostatic Calculations
    By Larry Leibman, Principal Naval Architect, DRS Defense Solutions, LLC

    In order to compute the hydrostatics properties of your hull model, Orca3D performs a numerical integration on the surfaces that you select for the hydrostatics analysis. This numerical integration is affected by the orientation of the surface, where in this context “orientation” refers to the direction that the surface normals are pointing. By convention, Orca3D assumes the surface normals point into the water (i.e. the normals are on the wet side of the surface). One might be tempted to say that this is the equivalent of assuming the normals point “outward” from the hull surfaces; however, this is not always true. Consider the case of a bow thruster opening in the hull. Here, pointing into the water will have the normals pointing inward. Surfaces whose normals are outward create positive displacement; when surface normals are inward, the displacement of that surface is negative. For the bow thruster example, it’s correct for the buoyant volume of the surface to be negative.

    Read the complete articles and more in this issue.
    Go to:

    http://www.westlawn.edu/news/Masthead21/index.html

    Note:
    New issues of The Masthead are in Internet flipping-book format, with control icons are located on the bar at the bottom of the screen

    If you prefer to read it in standard PDF format, go to the new flipping-book format and click on the download button on the bottom gray bar.

    To read The Masthead in the PDF format, you must have a current version of ADOBE ACROBAT READER. If you don't have it go to: http://get.adobe.com/reader/otherversions/

    You can click on:

    http://www.westlawn.edu/news/index.asp#Newsletter

    To see all back issues and read whichever one you like.

    Dave Gerr
    Director, Westlawn Institute
    www.westlawn.edu

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
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    Hell
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    Default Re: The March 2012 issue of Westlawn Institute's free journal The Masthead is posted

    Thank you for the reminder Mr. Gerr.
    I never learned from a man who agreed with me.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
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    East Quogue,NY
    Posts
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    Default Re: The March 2012 issue of Westlawn Institute's free journal The Masthead is posted

    Great issue, Dave.

    Kevin
    This new ship here is fitted according to the reported increase of knowledge among mankind. Namely, she is cumbered end to end with bells and trumpets and clocks and wires. It has been told to me she can call voices out of the air or the waters to con the ship while her crew sleep. But sleep though lightly. It has not yet been told to me that the sea has ceased to be the sea.--Rudyard Kipling

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