I would just do a proportional move like someone else suggested, but if you want a more complicated way: Build a model of the boat below the water line and try to balance it on a pencil. The model would need to accurately reflect the mass of the volume of the boat. For example you could make series of evenly spaced below-the-water cross-section out of cardboard, then glue them to a thin balsa wood "strongback" in their proper location. Then try to balance the model on a pencil or razorblade. The resulting balance point should be a close approximation of the center of buoyancy.
For this to work you need a fairly decent guess of where the waterline is then you need an accurate cross sectional shape at a series of points along the hull. Then you need to cut everything accurately and space it accurately... If you were creating a brand new design the effort might be worth it.
Messages In This Thread
- How do I find center of bouyancy w/o eng. degree
Ben Staley -- 9/5/2001, 2:07 pm- A complicated way
Nick Schade - Guillemot Kayaks -- 9/6/2001, 9:52 am- Re: How do I find center of bouyancy w/o eng. degr
Dale Frolander -- 9/5/2001, 9:37 pm- Re: How do I find center of bouyancy w/o eng. degr
Mike Hanks -- 9/5/2001, 3:09 pm- Re: How do I find center of bouyancy w/o eng. degr
Paul G. Jacobson -- 9/5/2001, 3:08 pm- Re: Put it in the water?
Don Beale -- 9/5/2001, 2:29 pm- Re: Too easy Don, think of something harder.
Ben Staley -- 9/5/2001, 2:47 pm- Re: Try rolling it *NM*
Don Beale -- 9/5/2001, 7:13 pm- Rolling - no problem, Bailing - big problem *NM*
Ted Henry -- 9/5/2001, 10:51 pm
- Re: Too easy Don, think of something harder.
LeeG -- 9/5/2001, 2:53 pm - Rolling - no problem, Bailing - big problem *NM*
- Re: Try rolling it *NM*
- Re: How do I find center of bouyancy w/o eng. degr
- A complicated way