| Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: Karl_Brogger]
#146292 06/20/08 03:48 AM 06/20/08 03:48 AM |
Joined: Aug 2004 Posts: 145 Cheshire, UK Simon
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Posts: 145 Cheshire, UK | I can't say I'd ever noticed, or thought about it. Why do you ask?
Simon Shadow 067 | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: jd259]
#146294 06/20/08 04:11 AM 06/20/08 04:11 AM |
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 207 couldn't resist it Codblow
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Posts: 207 couldn't resist it | I've found salt water tastes nasty , whilst fresh water is much nicer !
never buy a wooden boat that is advertised as fresh water sailed only - fresh water ROTS wood , salt water is a preservative .
when I take my keelboat through crinan canal the difference in bouyancy of the water is obvious on the painted waterline , travellers are also warned their boats float lower than in the sea and to adjust their draft allowances by a couple of inches .
I float in salt water
don't in fresh
salt water can give a nasty "stinging sensation " to a chaffed rear end , whilst fresh can be soothing , especially if peat ladden . (yes racing on lochness can cure your duke of argylls and make your manhood bigger at the same time !)
I think salt water makes a more manly sound like a thwack thump when hitting a wave rather than a feeble thaaarp when encountering a fresh water chop , perhaps its the drugs !!! <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />
Last edited by Codblow; 06/20/08 04:14 AM.
| | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: Karl_Brogger]
#146297 06/20/08 08:05 AM 06/20/08 08:05 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | There has to be somebody on here who has a answer to this.
Is there really a sigificant difference in how a beachcat floats on saltwater vs freshwater? From a brief google search there is a 2 lb difference in a cubic foot of water. That can't add up to much for how high the boat rides. It's not 2lb per cubic foot - more like 2% to 2.5%. A cubic foot of fresh water weighs about 62.4 lbs (28.3Kilo). A cubic foot of salt water weighs about 63.96lbs (29.0075). This is significant if you are composed mostly of water (humans) and can make the difference of sink or swim for an egg...but doesn't have much difference on a lightweight catamaran. Doing some really rough numbers; a cat that weighs 400lbs (sorry, I'm stopping the metric conversions) is going to get about 10 lbs of additional buoyancy in saltwater over fresh. spread out over the waterline length of two 18' hulls (roughly 12" wide at the waterline) will result in the boat floating .053 inches higher in the water...just under 1/16". Add some ripples and you'll never be able to measure the difference. However, given the error in my approximation of the catamaran hull being square and the quick and dirty numbers, I would say the range would be between 1/16" and 1/8". Man...you made me do algebra on a Friday...that's cold. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: Jake]
#146299 06/20/08 08:15 AM 06/20/08 08:15 AM | Anonymous
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Unregistered | This is significant if you are composed mostly of water (humans) and can make the difference of sink or swim for an egg...but doesn't have much difference on a lightweight catamaran. Thank god we dont sail eggs~!!! | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: Mary]
#146301 06/20/08 08:50 AM 06/20/08 08:50 AM |
Joined: Feb 2007 Posts: 266 UK Cheshirecatman
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Posts: 266 UK | So, since saltwater is denser than freshwater, does that mean that a displacement boat (like most cats) has to work harder to get through it and will therefore be slower in saltwater? (And more likely to pitchpole?)
Whereas, a planing hull on saltwater will ride a little bit higher and get on a plane faster and therefore be faster on saltwater than on freshwater?
Seems like all the boats trying for the 50 mph record are planing boats. Are all the venues used for those speed runs on saltwater? Surely the salt water displacement is of less volume than fresh water, therefore less wetted surface and less volume of water to displace. So is there a viscosity difference that goes with this that makes salt water slower? Cheshirecatman | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: Cheshirecatman]
#146302 06/20/08 09:21 AM 06/20/08 09:21 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | So, since saltwater is denser than freshwater, does that mean that a displacement boat (like most cats) has to work harder to get through it and will therefore be slower in saltwater? (And more likely to pitchpole?)
Whereas, a planing hull on saltwater will ride a little bit higher and get on a plane faster and therefore be faster on saltwater than on freshwater?
Seems like all the boats trying for the 50 mph record are planing boats. Are all the venues used for those speed runs on saltwater? Surely the salt water displacement is of less volume than fresh water, therefore less wetted surface and less volume of water to displace. So is there a viscosity difference that goes with this that makes salt water slower? Cheshirecatman Okay, let's add a lot more salt to the saltwater and make it even thicker. At what point do you say that you are pushing through salt? Do catamarans sail faster on freshwater or on the Great Salt Lake in Utah? | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: SurfCityRacing]
#146305 06/20/08 11:19 AM 06/20/08 11:19 AM |
Joined: Dec 2001 Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL waterbug_wpb
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Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL | I think most of this stuff (density, displacement, etc.) isn't noticable by the average person. Maybe at the extremes (like Dead Sea vs. some place with distilled water), or with some gigantic vessel (like an oil tanker)
But I'm not an engineer...
Jay
| | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: SurfCityRacing]
#146306 06/20/08 12:01 PM 06/20/08 12:01 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Slight tangent...
I've talked to several surfers that say they can feel differences in the weight of the water due to temp? Cold water being denser of course. Has anyone felt that difference on a boat. You'd really have to be tuned in. Don't forget to calculate temperature in your equation.
Slight tangent of the tangent...
Has anyone ever noticed that 20kts in colder wind feels like more than 20 kts of warmer wind? Case in point 20 kts in Santa Cruz or SF bay feels like it has more power than So Cal.
Densities...Cool. I can't say that I can tell a performance difference in cold vs. warm water (the difference in densities is extremely slight) but I will certainly concur with the differences in the air at different temperatures.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Salt water vs. Freshwater.
[Re: SurfCityRacing]
#146308 06/20/08 01:18 PM 06/20/08 01:18 PM |
Joined: Feb 2007 Posts: 266 UK Cheshirecatman
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Posts: 266 UK | Slight tangent...
I've talked to several surfers that say they can feel differences in the weight of the water due to temp? Cold water being denser of course. Has anyone felt that difference on a boat. You'd really have to be tuned in. Don't forget to calculate temperature in your equation.
Slight tangent of the tangent...
Has anyone ever noticed that 20kts in colder wind feels like more than 20 kts of warmer wind? Case in point 20 kts in Santa Cruz or SF bay feels like it has more power than So Cal.
Densities...Cool. They could have a point. I wasn't going to post this but..... http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/explan5.html#STCheshirecatman | | |
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