Russell wrote:John Vigor wrote:John Danicic wrote:
"Moment to trim 1 inch = 1400 foot pounds"
Not sure what that means.
John, I believe you measure fore or aft from the center of buoyancy.
For example, if you place a 100-pound weight 14 feet aft of the CB, the stern will trim (sink) by 1 inch. And if you place a 200-pound weight 7 feet forward of the CB, the bow will trim by1 inch.
John V.
Are you sure it isnt refering to port/starboard trim? I am shy of 200lbs and I am pretty sure standing on my bow doesnt sink the boat an entire inch, much less 2 (that would be 13 feet). However standing on all the way outboard on either side at the widest point certainly does (200lbs at 6 feet from center).
No Russell, it does not refer to port/starboard trim. This is from Ted Brewer's primer on yacht design:
"MOMENT TO TRIM 1 INCH (MTI): The MTI is the moment, expressed in foot-pounds, that will change the fore and aft trim of the yacht one inch. For a displacement hull, the MTI is, roughly (but close enough for all practical purposes), .35 times the square of the waterline area divided by the WL beam, or:
"For example; a boat has a LWL Area of 165 sq ft and a Beam WL of 8 feet. The MTI is .35 x 165 x 165 /8 = 1191 ft-lbs., say 1200 for rough figuring. Now you hang a 100 pound dink 18 feet abaft the CB. You've added 1800 ft-lbs of aft moment so the boat will trim 1800/1200 = 1.5 inches down by the stern. However, the boat does trim about its CF and, as that is usually abaft amidships, the stern will move less than the bow. You might find that she trims 5/8" down by the stern, and 7/8" up by the bow, making a total trim change of 1.5 inches."
John V.