one sheet will float 60 lbs????
i used the 2 inch thick poly , and maybe half the sheet
does that mean I am only going to float 30 lbs??
I dont believe that , I am going to go float my boat and see what happens ..
hmm im was thinking for the scupper on this thing you would need dual scuppers because once the water goes down one gunwhale chances are it wont be coming back up. did you have to like make a ramp so the water goes directly out the scupper?
One sheet of 1/2" thick 4x8 polyethylene will float 60lbs. Sorry I didn't clarify that.
That's pretty much exactly why you'd need dual scupper unless you're making your own bulkhead and foaming everything in. This is my reasoning on why my later rides yesterday felt more normal instead of nose heavy because I inevitably had 10-20 lbs in the side with the plugged scupper. I did consider the whole ramp idea for the scupper but realized that was over analyzing the situation. When the ski is inclined during normal riding, the amount of water that can be trapped in the chine is virtually meaningless and whatever foam, epoxy, bondo, etc. that you might put in there to neutralize the water weight will add almost as much weight and require a lot more work.
It's a boat... It's going to have excess water at any given time. Turf absorbs water but I'm not going to run less of it.
Based on the area they occupy pop bottles should float more weight than foam correct?
2 liters of foam and 2 liters of air inside plastic would displace the same amount of water. The only difference is weight and floatation of the material being used which I would think would be negligible in two things that only weigh a couple ounces.
2 liters of foam and 2 liters of air inside plastic would displace the same amount of water. The only difference is weight and floatation of the material being used which I would think would be negligible in two things that only weigh a couple ounces.
Wouldn't the plastic bottle contain more air than a piece of foam cut to the exact same shape thus be more boyant?
you should look at canoe/kayak air bladders....maybe you can find one that would fit in the gunwales or nose of the ski, from what I remember they are made of pretty thick material too, and would expand to fit wherever you needed it...
That would assume that the foam absorbs water. The floatation is more about displacing water and not allowing the water to sink the ski instead of actually floating the ski. Think about someone sitting on the hood. That won't sink the ski and half an engine bay of water won't sink the ski but a full engine bay will. So if you could displace half of the area that's in the engine bay the ski couldn't sink.
Wouldn't the plastic bottle contain more air than a piece of foam cut to the exact same shape thus be more boyant?
If an object displaces 1 cubic foot of water and the object weighs nothing, then it will have ~62lbs of floatation. If the object weighs 10lbs, then you subtract that from the 62lbs/cu.ft. of water, so you get 52lbs of net floatation. It doesn't matter if it's filled with air or not, all you need is the weight of the object and the volume of water it displaces (and the density of the water).
However, to add to that, some materials compress so as they go further down, you will lose some floatation or if they absorb water, same thing.
If you put the bottles uncapped in the freezer for a few hours you will get more air volume in them. :idea: