T40x20
CATAMARAN
Verrrrry interesting.... but STUPID.
-- Arte Johnson (I'm half kidding)
Considering
Multihull TriloBoats
Judging by the
amount of correspondence I field on the subject, there's a fair
amount of interest in multihull TriloBoats – catamarans (cats),
trimarans (tris) and proas.
Here, I'll lay out the modest benefits and considerable pitfalls I see in this approach at cruising sizes, along with an impressive example of a smaller scale project that I consider highly successful.
I warn you... this
is rather dull going. Unless you're particularly interested, I'd
bail.
A bit
of jargon: Amas
are the longitudinal 'hulls' composing a multihull. There's some
variation in use about the net, but it seems a pretty generally
accepted term.
NOTE: The
T40x20 CATAMARAN, shown above, was a 'cartoon' made on request for
relatives who'd fallen in love with Phil Bolger's DOUBLE EAGLE. It's
way beyond my engineering skills to even put it out as a design, but
gives a taste of a square boat approach.
I should
emphasize that this approach is not our taste, in
general. Anke and I would be off on a Wharram TIKI, or at least a
dory-ish trimaran if we ever succumbed to the allure of polyhullery
and warm waters.
Multihull Principles
The use of
multiple hulls is primarily to greatly improve stability. They may
follow one or a mix of two strategies:
Float the leeward ama
– Its reserve displacement resists heeling moment, tending the
whole to low angles of heel. Its wetted surface and resulting drag,
however, slow the vessel and induce lee helm.
Hike the windward ama
– Its weight, lifted at the long end of a lever arm, resists
heeling moment, tending the whole to low angles of heel. Lifting up
and clear of the water's surface reduces wetted surface and resulting
drag, as well as hull-dynamic weather helm, optimizing speed.
Cruising
catamarans favor the first strategy, while proas favor the second, as
do most racing or speed maximizing craft. Trimarans mix the strategy,
and tend to work with shorter lever arms.
The longer and
leaner the hull(s), the faster the vessel can be. Wharrams suggest a
minimum of 11:1 length to waterline beam ratio. Such hulls are easily
driven to higher-than-displacement speeds. Extremely narrow hulls
with very high freeboard (over low draft) are enabled by the amas,
which keep them from flopping over onto their sides.
Circular hull
sections are fastest, but have low lateral resistance and can't be
easily built of sheet materials. Rectangular sections carry the most
load (assuming equal beam and draft), and have high lateral
resistance. V sections have good lateral resistance and speed, but
low displacement on a given draft.
Long and narrow
has ergonomic consequences. In order to have a wide enough interior
to fit even a snug double berth within a fast hull, the hull quickly
gets long. Flare above the waterline can help, but a platform must be
placed high to take advantage, reducing its headroom. The interior is
linear, in shorter hulls, with little opportunity for circular social
settings below-decks.
A common solution
is to live largely on top of the hull/ama(s)/deck. But this generates
considerable superstructure which adds weight and windage.
A mixed strategy
is often employed... low superstructure to provide headroom over the
narrow hull, into which, perhaps, only feet may dangle. It may
overhang the sides to help provide 'elbow-room', storage or even low
headroom bunks.
Wharrams recommend
a 3ft sea-riding height for bluewater cats (I take that as applying
generally to multis), measured from the waterline to the underside of
decks between amas.
Caveat to Multihulls vs Monohulls
Here are some for
DIY builders to consider when comparing types:
For a given
footprint, a multihull adds cost, complexity and engineering
challenges.
You are building
two to three monohulls, cross beams to join them, with one or more
decks and/or superstructures over. Each of these components
represents a fair chunk of the effort required by a monohull. Special
challenges – like mast steps, Ackermann steering, high leverage
forces throughout – make design daunting to dangerous for the
amateur. Everything multiplied x multi.
In terms of square
sections, things get scarier... the initial and reserve buoyancy of a
slab is much higher than usual sections. Larger forces develop faster
than the usual rules-of-thumb were evolved to handle.
If one joins the
very few pioneers in this field, I recommend a cautious approach,
backed by modelling, certified expert advice and incremental
sea-trials.
The payoffs are
speed(!) under sail, humongous decks and undeniably cool. For
the pure of heart, able to run lightly through the world, multihulls
can more than pay their way.
So, with that
caveat, let's continue...
Simple Conversions: Adding
Outriggers to Square Boats
Adding amas to a
full-width TriloBoat designed as a cruising hull, I feel, is a losing
proposition.
Triloboats and
other box barges already have the highest monohull form stability
possible on a given footprint (length x beam x draft).
As cruisers, box
barges skim upright downwind, benefitting from shoal draft relative
to their displacement (don't have to push much water aside). On the
wind, they benefit from heeling by presenting a V section to the
water.
A simple,
multihull conversion detracts from both. The outrigger(s) add
displacement and drag off the wind, and force the hull more upright
on the wind. Plus, they clutter the deck, increase the beam with high
windage, vulnerable bits, and – starting from the high mono-deck –
don't offer usable sidedecks.
Lose-lose-lose.
Critiquing the T40x20 CATAMARAN
Let's take for
granted that my T40x20 CATAMARAN can be well-engineered to be
affordably and soundly built.
Even so, the two
amas together total only 8ft hull beam. Displacement is roughly
equivalent, then, to a T40x8 square monohull. But the monohull
wouldn't require the two, inboard ama sidewalls. We'd be able to live
within the T40x8, rather than on top of it, eliminating much of the
superstructure with its weight and windage.
If a large living
platform were the goal, converting to a barge by hulling over between
amas would increase displacement by roughly 250%, and likely halve
construction effort.
Box Section Approach to Multihulls
So let's look at
it from the other direction. Could a 'square' multhull be worthwhile,
designed from the ground up? This, to my mind, shows much more
promise.
Triloboat
approaches that might apply:
- Square sections
- Constant section
- Whole and even fractions of sheet materials
These are
independent, and can be considered throughout the design.
We'd likely want
to start with a long, slender hull, as per multihull normal, for an
easily driven hull.
Square sections
carry the same weight on less draft than all others. That can be
useful. Their right angle chines provide good lateral resistance.
They're easy to build, and interiors are easier to fit. Hull
mid-bodies benefit most.
But flat bottoms
forward – especially when held upright by amas – pound when
slapped by the water's surface. What to do?
Fining down the
bow - and maybe adding a cutwater (a sharp, faux hull
bonded under the bow) - helps a lot with this. I'd consider matching
the forward curves in plan and profile (TAB) for least turbulence.
I doubt the stern
needs to narrow, and full width preserves precious deck space at the
transom. I'd consider a very easy exit, with the bottom of the
transom at or slightly above the waterline. Being a multihull, we're
not going to heel much (so won't drag the transom corners), while the
release wave depresses to help match the exit angle. Never actually
seen this in square hull action, so needs experiment.
Constant sections
– of whatever shape – naturally develop parallel longitudinal
lines (such as the sheer) along the constant section. This is
especially useful amidships, with superstructure planned and fit
along this stretch.
Constant section
amas , with shaped foam ends (where shapes get complex) and glassed
over, show promise, I think, for easy construction and good
performance. I'd personally favor assymetrical V sections (especially
Newick plow-style), with the leeward face(s) oriented vertically for
lateral resistance.
Whole and even
fractions of sheet materials can be applied to hull, superstructure
and decks, for economies of effort an material.
Another approach
to square sections might be to rotate the square sectioned hull
45deg, for an upright V section. We'd end up with a diamond-style
section resembling Superman's chest logo (variations are possible).
The right-angle keel would run the entire centerline, eliminating any
need for a cutwater at the bow. Downside is increased draft for the
same displacement.
A Square Trimaran: (Mostly) A
Success Story
Mark Meyer designed and built an upright box section trimaran at 27 feet. It is wicked
fast, fun, good looking (I think) and carried his family safely
across the waters of northern Southeast Alaska. He used it extensively to fish Tenakee Inlet for at least a decade.
Notably, he used
square section, aluminum girders, rigidly mounted, for cross-beams.
These worked very well.
His only
disappointment were the flat-bottomed amas – skimming across
the water they pounded hard. He added a V section cutwater toward
the bow, which improved the situation, but not much. Apparently,
flat-bottomed, flying amas proved to be a poor choice.
NOTE: Wharram Designs abandoned flat-bottoms for their catamarans for the same reason... the windward ama raised enough to pound badly. Nevertheless, they safely travelled far and wide.
Mark definitively proved the concept for the main hull, and new amas were in the works last I checked in.
My personal opinion is that square sections are a viable choice for hulls that stay immersed, especially when building quick and dirty or on a small scale.
I, myself would opt for other shapes in any project large enough to represent a significant investment. It seems to me that, beyond a certain point, the savings in construction effort cut into long-term multihull values.
But that's me.
*****
So there you are,
dear Readers. For those of you interested in these exotic pursuits, I
wish you happy doodling.
And keep me
posted!
Hi Dave,
ReplyDeleteSynchronicity (n.) – “the coincidental occurrence of events and especially psychic events (as similar thoughts in widely separated persons or a mental image of an unexpected event before it happens) that seem related but are not explained by conventional mechanisms of causality – used especially in the psychology of C. G. Jung” (Webster)
* Though other questions of mine have received more attention from me, the one of multihull triloboats has been on a quiet but persistent backburner. Your synchronous blog post hit the spot there.
* Since you don’t have a blog post titled, “So, How Cool Am I?”, I’ve been pondering which random post to use to drop a general compliment into. And just when I went to look through your blog in earnest … I found this new excellent example and potential compliment bucket. Nicely done.
-----------------------------
I am inquisitive and capable enough to have been the bane of many of my teachers and answerers-du-jour over the years. Some could not answer. Some did not want to work that hard. A few actually admitted it.
Over the course of many years and thousands of questions, I’ve noticed patterns. Some patterns seem to mature into conclusions. One of those is the elusive connection between intelligence, knowledge, and teaching talent.
While far too complex for a blog comment, I’ll summarize. I believe there are positive correlations between intelligence, and capacities for knowledge and teaching talent. However, there are many, many more intelligent, knowledge people who cannot explain or teach what they know to save their lives than the opposite. I encounter them regularly. Even when I redesign and simplify the question for them repeatedly, and serve it up as if we’re playing T-ball, they just can’t hit it. A conundrum for sure.
On the other hand, there are relatively few, with seemingly equal intelligence, who can use their accumulated knowledge and better understanding in an uncommonly useful way. They manage to overcome the standard “it depends” obstacle that stops so many others. They manage to hold their egos in check and to avoid showboating their superiority. They manage to actually take a minute to consider what the other person needs vs. what they themselves want to say. They are successful at squeezing themselves like an orange to produce the drops of juice most salient to a situation, leaving the rest behind, and passing those drops on to others in a way that meets the less knowledgeable person where that person is, not where they themselves are. Having cracked the code on what it actually means, they alone are worthy of the title of ‘teacher’.
You, Dave, are that rare, valuable second type of person. That is your gift (and sometimes your curse ;-), and you share it willingly. This blog post is but one small example of that.
I thank you for it.
Yoda
======================================
I'll add to the litany of adulation by saying, from personally seeing it on numerous occasions, that the way you demolish a package of store bought cookies is highly admirable. Not my personal choice for boatbuilding fuel but, hey, it sure seems to work for you. In fact, perhaps fodder for another essential boat building cog blog post: the prime role of a rack of store bought cookies for efficient marine construction.
ReplyDeleteAll that aside I'd add that some of Gary Dierkings outrigger canoes are essentially long and lean trilo hulls and do quite well. We're talking proas here basically and with a bit more heel than cats. In addition a proas connecting beams are much less stressed thus less materials. And the much necessary floatation bubble that hangs off the leeward side would be easy to construct on a squarish trilo hull. Proven to be very safe at sea in knockdown situations! It would have to be fairly long to get any real interior space but the beauty of multis, besides their cushy-magnificent ride offshore, is in-harbor tropical sprawl space. With awnings here and there, and a shitpot of kayaks and tenders on deck, what a nice home in some tropical archipelago.
Lastly, Gary Leepaks bi-plane junk rigged cat "Dragon Wings" had 7.5 to 1 hulls. It performed well (semi-V hull though) and he traded speed for that wonderful cat ride. If one is down with this trade-off (wise in a time of random lost shipping containers dotting the worlds oceans) then it can apply to a host of multihull designs.
Never say never..... trilos have great potential for multihull configurations. Just needs a pioneer to fine tune the concept in the real world.
"I'll add to the litany of adulation by saying, from personally seeing it on numerous occasions, that the way you demolish a package of store bought cookies is highly admirable. Not my personal choice for boatbuilding fuel but, hey, it sure seems to work for you. In fact, perhaps fodder for another essential boat building cog blog post: the prime role of a rack of store bought cookies for efficient marine construction."
DeleteThe impact on my 'adulation' level would of course depend on the flavor of cookie.
Epoxy chip! Yummy!!!!!
DeleteShucks, Y'all, ya make me blush.
DeleteBut I do love a cookie... I'm a weak man.
DZ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyyaOJWmZHU
ReplyDeleteSlender barge hulls make great proa vakas!
Hi En Proa,
DeleteThe Vaka is the main hull of a proa? I see that the ama (outrigger, if I have the term right) looks to be a V hull?
Nice model!
Dave Z
I keep coming back to this post, Dave.... incredibly romantic to figure out a 48X4 box proa. Good info here to harvest. December 23rd, 2016.
ReplyDeleteI fuggin love this idea!
ReplyDeleteDave,
ReplyDeleteI've often thought of Box shaped hulls for a catamaran, I'm not sure if if the dream came from this post or I found this post running down a dream...
Instead of box/barge front end, why not keep the bottom flat and bring the hull sides to a point at the stem? Should be a nice slicing entry into the waves. At 48x4 I don't see the windward hull flying and presenting the pounding problem, but I'm not at all experienced with catamarans. Perhaps a mast in each hull to keep the CE low would keep the lift on the windward hull minimal. My wife will tell you that I'm both stubborn and dumb enough to actually build one of these.
I've been vacillating between a T32x12 and Wharram Tiki 37 and I can't really seem to make up my mind. Just when one idea has a set itself in my head, something comes along and brings the other idea to the fore.
Anyway the goal is to do the great loop, sooner rather than later.
Thanks for the blog!
tim
Hi Tim,
DeleteI agree with pointy bows for multihulls... the doodle at the beginning of the post is as you suggest. Cutwaters are relatively easy to add, and these can help, too.
It's possible on larger hulls that the forefoot can be kept below the waterline. Benford dories, for example, do this without apparent problems. That would certainly help.
Happy wife; happy life! Good luck with decisions.
Dave Z
This recently in:
ReplyDeleteMichael Schacht, a designer of considerably more skill than myself has designed what looks to me to be a fully functional, square-section trimaran, based on rotating the section 45deg (as described in the post, above).
You can read about it, here:
https://proafile.com/multihull-boats/article/the-bug-out-boat
Dave Z