Anonymous wrote:
Hi Jeremy,
I think explaining the dynamics of the pacific proa will help the monohull family to make better sense of it all....
Only true Pacific Proas of all multihulls have almost Zero "aka" (cross beam) loads, Cats and Tris put huge loads on their cross beams, forcing them to be seriously engineered resulting in ether heavy or expensive beams.
With the mast placed on top of the "vaka" (big hull on a proa) and a shroud connected to the "ama" (small windward hull). Mast compression is over the hull, vs over the akas on cats. Aka compression as a result of heeling is totally eliminated, since akas are to windward and shroud is lifting the windward ama, vs trimarans that are loading leeward akas more and more as wind builds, since the leeward ama on a trimaran is, counteracting wind and heeling forces. These heavy loads are some of the biggest problems in multihull design, resulting in expensive engineering.
Pacific proas have none of this due to a genius design of a vessel that excepts the wind from one side only. "A shunting boat", meaning it can sail in both directions, as long as the ama is to windward. The mast is on the vaka and the shroud lifts the ama, for that is a pacific proa..... And that friends is the simplest, cheapest, lightest and strongest multi possible. Just remember a stayed mast is the foundation of a low stress vessel, now, low stress is what adds strength, by reducing weight.....................
Very interesting rig you're working on, Good Luck Jeremy.
all d best.
rael.
Rael, thanks for the 'good luck' wishes.
As for the theory on pac proas.... I have been meaning to make comment on your 'la shunk' thread, so will take this as a cue to go ahead (refer that thread for post to come). Current build is a Pacific/Oceanic double canoe that is to be rigged a shunter, because the companionway hatch needs to be kept on the lee side of a dodger facing the weather, and at the same time allows the bigger of the two hulls to be the primary displacement hull, to lee.
Al weight to w/ward of this lee hull's CB, can be carried by a shroud( if rig is stayed), or elelse there could be a cantilever mast stepped in an 'aka' structure between the hulls.
Going with a stayed split rig ( as per the older type Kanak and Tuamauto double canoes) will no doubt be the lighter and less costly way to go, so is what I can plan on for the immediate future.
Beam of this Pahi will be 5M, and as designed and built so far, will be joined by wooden kiato( traditional 'cross spars' as they are known by pacific people), but as already mentioned, a structure carrying rig load from a cantilevered mast ( something akin to Richard Newick's akas on proa Cheers, but fabricated rather than laminated using wood) is a possibility, if testing on a small prototype shows promise.
Using traditional kiato keep's a lid on costs, and allows me to fit the individual hulls into tight spaces and onto small trailers while in the building stage. Also, the beam dimension can be varied, If I really need a bit more, or possibly a bit less, rather.
Weight is relatively low, since no heavy ballast is required for stability, given that all crew, stores, gear and rig, serve to keep the craft right side up - like a catamaran, except that I have the option of packing stuff in such a way as to lighten the smaller hull (the ama) if it is beneficial to do so.
More important to me, is that I can build with and live with solid wooden boards, in the way of cabin soles, furnishings and slatted decks, rather than be so obsessed by weight reduction, that I begin looking at a tramp stretched between 2 hulls, or even worse; a tramp stretched between one hull and an Ama that has no internal volume for living space.
As a teenager, living life again, a double canoe, minimalist in the extreme, would be the way to go, now the closest I'l get to that, might as well be an experiment in what is achievable, using our/my currently available resources.
Agreed, Oceanic people using stone or shell tools to shape, then fasten and rig their canoes with vegetable fibre, developed amazing craft..... Ive spent a major part of my life in quest of knowledge covering this subject. As well, the development of a bamboo raft into a sailing platform with a battened reef-able Junk sail, is equally interesting.
Dynamics of form stability apply equally to both the bamboo raft and the canoe/raft outrigger hybrid.
Still, the double canoe slots right in to this scheme of floating craft, and from what we know, is the better load carrier of the lot, if sailing performance is required well.......as you like to say"keep on shunting".