What was the rationale behind the differences in insignia, specifically the cuff rings, for the RN, RNR, & RNVR? Besides being able to call the RNVR the " Wavy Navy"... Edit: And I know it was so you could tell at a glance who was which, but why was it considered so important to do so? The US Navy didn't have anything like it to distinguish the Annapolis grads from the ROTC grads (the functional equivalent of the RNR) or the wartime ninety-day wonders (the RNVR counterpart), so it seems to me that there was some snobbery involved.
@bensimmons28503 жыл бұрын
Can we get the full 'Drach rants about German WW2 designs inefficiencies.' experience? With special focus on the Konigsberg class.
@Nipplator999999999993 жыл бұрын
Maybe it's irrelevant, but is the boat tail bullet shape actually related to the hull form in any way? What is the effect of the transom stern if it was made to be concave, would it cause an even greater vacuum and vortex effects?
@spectre16943 жыл бұрын
What was the budget for the Royal Navy/Navies throughout ww1 and how does it compare to the ww2 or the modern day naval budget
@QuizmasterLaw3 жыл бұрын
But bricks make wonderful weapons!
@gustavchambert70723 жыл бұрын
Everyone who's disappointed we didn't get the 84-hour version of this video raise their hand. XD
@matsv2013 жыл бұрын
Well then there is part 2 and 3... then later the Unplaned part 4.. and the part 5 that didnt fit in part 5.. then part 6, 7 and 8 for upcoming questions
@The_New_IKB3 жыл бұрын
Give me the 84 hour video or Give me Death!
@icealkion3 жыл бұрын
Soon:tm:
@adamkneeland16933 жыл бұрын
I want a 48 hour vid
@Sei_gsicht3 жыл бұрын
🙋♂️
@abyssaljam4413 жыл бұрын
Being a Marine engineering student I completely agree, that anything above the basics is mind numbingly complex .
@mindbomb93413 жыл бұрын
Marine engineering!!!??? I would love to ask you some questions about buoyancy to help debate against Flat Earthers.
@米空軍パイロット3 жыл бұрын
@@mindbomb9341 I'd love to hear how the flat earthers perceive buoyancy.
@petermuller39953 жыл бұрын
@@mindbomb9341 why waste his time?
@mindbomb93413 жыл бұрын
@@petermuller3995 Hahaha. That's a good question. I see Flat Earthism as a gateway conspiracy theory. By posting things against it, we can hopefully reduce the inflow of new members.
@77thTrombone3 жыл бұрын
@@petermuller3995 I agree. I just engaged a flat earther in a KZbin thread. I couldn't tell if he was serious facetious. Either way, it was a ridiculous experience. There's no correcting them online.
@idontwanttoputmyname4033 жыл бұрын
I think we can all agree floaty log was the peak of naval design.
@idaho_girl3 жыл бұрын
LOL
@captainbullcat47573 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, nvel desin
@Deridus3 жыл бұрын
Oh, please. Wooden slab was best. Floaty log is SO last epoch.
@idontwanttoputmyname4033 жыл бұрын
@@Deridus You are a fool for thinking wooden slab even compared to floaty log.
@gangfire59323 жыл бұрын
Awww man I _loved_ floaty log. Naval warfare in the Age of Hand Paddle was far more interesting than these later periods.
@mceajc3 жыл бұрын
Everyone: Which would be better, thin and long, or short and wide? Rear-Admiral Popov: R O U N D.
@53gaDr34mc4st3 жыл бұрын
" K R U G " -(КРУГ is circle in Russian.)-
@thomasreed87103 жыл бұрын
I vote for a coricle
@KevinSmith-ys3mh3 жыл бұрын
An expression of the Russian soul in steel - present a threat in all directions, while confusing the opposition as to where you're going next!! Why aren't there more armoured coricles around, I wonder......(nod to Tom 😆). On another note, there was a 2018ish? attempt at a similar ice pack resistant arctic oil drilling rig/mobile island deployed off Alaska, didn't go well and ran aground on a real island. 🙄
@benywidodo3 жыл бұрын
R O T U N D
@unclestone84063 жыл бұрын
"Ahh, I see you are an Admiral of culture, as well..."
@evensgrey3 жыл бұрын
Then there's all the fun you can have with SUBMERSIBLE hulls. Back when the US began playing with nuclear powered submarines, they decided to build a little experimental boat, mostly full of batteries, to do some testing of what the handling characteristics of this new hull form called a 'body of revolution' would be like. The tank tests said it should be a very efficient hull form for a sub while underwater, which was where a nuclear powered sub was expected to spend almost all it's time while on patrol. A body of revolution is one which is formed by taking a curve and rotating it about an axis. For the sort of curve you'd use for a hull shape, the result is sort of cigar shaped, and all cross sections of it are circles. So, they build this test boat and take it out to do test maneuvering to see if it does anything strange. Well, it did something strange, all right. The strange behavior was named the "Jesus Christ Factor," most likely due to someone saying that when it was discovered. One of the properties of a hull form that has all cross sections being circular is it has no hydro-dynamically preferred orientation in the water. They tried to pull a sharp turn (like you'd pull in combat to evade enemy anti-sub weapons) and discovered that when you turn sharply in a sub with this kind of hull form, it likes to snap-roll into a steep dive, in excess of 45 degrees down. Now, snapping into a steep dive is fine and dandy when you WANT to do that, and could make for a nifty evasion maneuver, but most of the time you don't want to evade like that. It risks you hitting the sea bed or exceeding your crush depth. fortunately, it just needed a small rudder added to the back of the conning tower to prevent the boats from doing that.
@mikespangler983 жыл бұрын
USS Albacore. Round hulls with the slab sided sail makes for an interesting ride on a surface transit in rough seas.
@xiro63 жыл бұрын
@@mikespangler98 Yup, the US Navy spent decades interested in any kind of round hulls with slavs.
@Deridus3 жыл бұрын
Just reading this made me pucker up. Congratulations, you actually made me feel anxious... and very glad I am a Mountaineer, not a Mariner.
@evensgrey3 жыл бұрын
@@Deridus Testing out new vehicle designs can indeed be fun. Makes me glad I don't I'm not a pilot of flying, floating, or submersible craft.
@Deridus3 жыл бұрын
@@evensgrey There are some things I am too chicken to do. I know my limits. That said... In a different life track, I'd love to be an experimental aircraft pilot.
@rickashcroft82263 жыл бұрын
As a naval architect with more than 45 years of experience in hull design, this was a good video for non-technical people to help them understand the complexity and compromise that goes into every ship design. On stability: roll acceleration is critical not only to equipment functionality but also to habitability. Too stiff a ship, roll period very short, and equipment, especially those located in high places can actually be broken off the ship, and people have trouble standing and moving around. On speed/power: as a gross rule of thumb for every 3 knot increase in speed, double the shaft power. This rough approximation works throughout the speed range. During my 12 years responsible for hull form at a major U.S. shipyard, it was common for us to go through dozens of iterations on the hull geometry (both commercial and naval auxiliaries ships) before we settled on one that met all of the requirements for speed, power, range, habitability, seakeeping, maneuverability, as well as sufficient volume to carry whatever was necessary to meet the mission requirements. Inevitably, the final hull was not ideal for any requirement, but always met, and often significantly exceeded, the contract specifications. Always a fun puzzle to crack!
@yngveahlenback3203 жыл бұрын
On stability(habitability): I think some roll periods/accelerations are very detrimental to seasickness and such, so that also have to be considered.
@dragonbutt3 жыл бұрын
So, question, albeit a silly one. Is a bathtub shape a valid hull design?
@Dave_Sisson3 жыл бұрын
Does that doubling power for an extra 3 knots apply to those 10,000 gross ton catamarans made by companies like Incat that cruise at 40 to 50 knots, or is the equation different for big catamarans?
@philipwebb9603 жыл бұрын
The soul of engineering is compromise.
@jeadie81313 жыл бұрын
@@philipwebb960 the art is how you put ten pounds into a five pound bag better than your competitor.
@CaptainFury7673 жыл бұрын
When I was a young midshipman, we spent a month in a classroom wrestling with the concept of ship's stability. You nailed it in a matter of minutes. Well done Professor Drach.
@guylelanglois66423 жыл бұрын
When I was a young mid shipman it took a month to pound an hours worth of information into my head. Much easier for both of us these days I'm sure.
@CharliMorganMusic3 жыл бұрын
The Square Cube Law: it's why a 20" shell is a lot more than four-inches scarier than a 16" shell.
@NareshSinghOctagon Жыл бұрын
Before taking in other factors,the funniest being that no one knowing that your BB has the biggest fielded guns due to how well kept a secret it was until after the war is over.
@pedrofelipefreitas2666 Жыл бұрын
As a practical example, the iowa's super heavy shells had around 18kg of bursting charge, the yamato's type 1 had 38kg. That's at least 2 times as scary lol
@NareshSinghOctagon Жыл бұрын
@@pedrofelipefreitas2666,one of the other factors was the fact that the Iowas' shells actually penetrated better at long distance due to the denser design of the fore end then the Yamatos' shell.
@davidandmartinealbon31553 жыл бұрын
I feel insulted, my brick shaped boat floats just fine. Admittedly it isn't very fast... And it turns like, well... A brick... But other than that it works fine, sort of
@hallo0hoi3 жыл бұрын
but is it very good at blockading like a brick wall?
@demian75673 жыл бұрын
Oh you must have an Optimist.
@leandersearle50943 жыл бұрын
For a brick, he sails pretty good.
@ErikHare3 жыл бұрын
I think it's a terrible shame to denigrate the floating brick despite its obvious advantages over the previous design, the non floating brick.
@Philip2718283 жыл бұрын
And the stability calculations are nice and easy.
@aasgier90913 жыл бұрын
2:50 The chance to show the Russian round battleships on screen was missed here.
@idaho_girl3 жыл бұрын
I had that thought too. But perhaps they are so out of the norm and were designed for such specialized circumstances, he thought it best not to include them to prevent them from being a distraction?
@aasgier90913 жыл бұрын
@@idaho_girl Oh, for sure. It would have been a huge meme, but anyone not familiar with the joke (read: not following Drach for too long) would be completely out of the loop.
@grahamsell38633 жыл бұрын
As a Naval Architect, I can say that this video is very good and covers pretty much every major concept in naval architecture (excluding all the math. There is a LOT of math). Very good summary of what naval architects think about when designing a a hull form.
@OnboardG13 жыл бұрын
I always click fastest on Drach's nerdy engineering videos. Boilers, steel formulation and now hull form. Excellent. I can pretend it's continuing professional development if anyone asks me.
@stefanlaskowski66603 жыл бұрын
Agreed. I can't wait for his video on propeller design.
@juliusraben35263 жыл бұрын
Shell development
@kirbyculp34493 жыл бұрын
Be sure to check out Greg's Airplanes channel.
@thecrackpotfarmer9488 Жыл бұрын
I strongly agree. I did not come here for flashy entertainment, I came here for education, in a no nonsense form with just a tad of dry humor. I don't often give strangers on the internet money... But Drach deserves it!
@Alobo0753 жыл бұрын
Can concur, I have a shorter, fatter hull form, and I am quite slow. :)
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
USS Wasp?
@michaelhellwinkle99993 жыл бұрын
Currently sitting in my stateroom on the usns loyal watching this. Google the ship to see what happens when you care about sea keeping to the extreme. We barely roll at all in up to 12 ft seas... but out top speed in a sea state 0 is 6 knots
@valhallastiger29603 жыл бұрын
That is the epitome of brick
@evensgrey3 жыл бұрын
@@valhallastiger2960 Well, it's not meant to go fast. It's a passive SONAR surveillance vessel. I would think a slow top speed would be considered a desirable feature in such a ship. Passive SONAR doesn't really get along that well with fast travel through the water. I do have to wonder how USNS Loyal managed a rated speed of 9.6 knots if she only makes 6 knots in a flat calm.
@valhallastiger29603 жыл бұрын
@@evensgrey i wasnt attacking the ship it just wasnt what i was expecting to see Is it twin hull or single?
@53gaDr34mc4st3 жыл бұрын
W I D E
@michaelhellwinkle99993 жыл бұрын
@@evensgrey maybe when it was first commissioned it went 10 knots ( I doubt it) but she's not exactly a young girl anymore. If we really push it we could get 7 knots probably... but then the main engines would want a few weeks of R&R
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
I can't believe you didn't go at least a tiny bit into the American stern, with its surfboard like qualities that got rid of the turbulence not by narrowing the stern horizontally, but tapering it vertically. THAT is where America got her fast battleships, even though prop design then became a problem for quite a while, due to cavitation, the boatman's nightmare. But by narrowing it vertically, it made each fast battleship into a surfboard, not only not wasting its hp by burying its ass into the sea like any old displacement hull, but using that wasted hp to propel them even faster, by surfing their own wake, a phenomenon most experienced pleasure boat captains are familiar with. Transferring that concept to a battleship platform, given that almost all pleasure yachts at the time went for the traditional horizontal narrowing so the bow looked much as the stern, was indeed revolutionary. It was really only achieved 100% with the Iowas, due to length limitations on the Washingtons and South Dakotas, but not mentioning it is sort of goofy, given that all modern warship and many commercial ships use the exact same technology, just tuned up a bit. Funny you included the square stern, but not that. You do know only American Heavy Cruisers had that stern? Light cruisers had traditional round sterns, which were the beginning of the surfboard stern, although far simpler as they were so narrow. The fat battleship sterns came from this concept. But I suppose you could go on forever on this subject. Kudos for a valiant charge at a complex subject and an extremely understandable presentation. I dare say you might have saved many lives by making Sunday sailors more aware of metacentric height alone! (Their eyes glaze over when the phrase is even mentioned, even though they own a million dollar yacht!)
@keto_writes3 жыл бұрын
"since we're not going to make an 84hr run time video ..." ... wait, you're not? ... where did YT put the Down vote ...
@koboldparty47083 жыл бұрын
There is, at the moment, one singular downvote on this video.
@77thTrombone3 жыл бұрын
That is quite the antidrachinifelian response. I shall file a complaint with the Office of Consumer Dissatisfaction Bureau Department, at their Naval Affairs desk
@StaffordMagnus3 жыл бұрын
I dunno, Patreon Drydock episode 583 has a good chance of being that long.
@the_undead3 жыл бұрын
I would not be against the idea of an 84 hour video
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment3 жыл бұрын
*Reads title* A wise Sergeant once said: For a brick, -he flew- she floated pretty good.
@R1J3H3 жыл бұрын
"Were it so easy" - A certain Swedish warship
@seanarano47543 жыл бұрын
also a certain russian repair(?) ship
@blanca-borb3 жыл бұрын
@@seanarano4754 Do you see torpedo boats?
@HereticsRight3 жыл бұрын
Trust me, he knows what the ladies like.
@SolmonGTrauth3 жыл бұрын
For a human you’d make a great shell
@augustosolari77213 жыл бұрын
Drachinifel: mentions a brick. USS Monitor enters the conversation.
@ogscarl3t3753 жыл бұрын
At least USS Monitor's turret was "maneuverable" as in it is forever spinning even in the depths of davy jone's locker and imitates a certain famous adorable seal...
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
@@ogscarl3t375 It did its job. How many vessels ever built can say that? And built in a nonce, at that. Never laugh at THE MONITOR. Monitors in general, laugh away until your gut splits, but NOT The Monitor.
@ostlandr3 жыл бұрын
Actually the Monitor's hull wasn't per se a brick. It was well tapered at both ends. Her issue was the complete absence of freeboard, along with flush grates in the deck for ventilation.
@gregandrews72813 жыл бұрын
You rang?
@ferky1233 жыл бұрын
Barges enter the conversation.
@ComradeBenedict3 жыл бұрын
Hydrodynamics: for when thermodynamics alone is no longer depressing enough on its own
@77thTrombone3 жыл бұрын
Froude you, Geeky Boi! You need to _transform_ yo'self, and I know just _Laplace_ you can do it!
@andresmartinezramos75133 жыл бұрын
The only piece of garbage on the level of hydrodynamics is aeroelasticity. And I'm a week away from failing it.
@77thTrombone3 жыл бұрын
@@andresmartinezramos7513 I'm sure they hadn't even invented aeroelasticity when I was in school. Good luck!
@andresmartinezramos75133 жыл бұрын
@@77thTrombone Thanks mate!
@belacickekl75793 жыл бұрын
@@andresmartinezramos7513 Fourier series for DayZ!
@DudokX3 жыл бұрын
The diagram with the center of gravity and center of buoyancy really helped me to visualize how and why ships roll over!
@idaho_girl3 жыл бұрын
I appreciated the definition of the metacentric height. That is something that I somehow missed when I was casually looking for explanations of the stability of hullforms in the past. Of course, if I had not been lazy and bothered to read a proper I likely would have gotten it. LOL
@Pointclearius3 жыл бұрын
Perfectly Timed, I shall listen to this whilst constructing vessels in From the Depths and this video will come in very handy. Thanks drach!
@bensimmons28503 жыл бұрын
Wait, your crafts are not repulsed by both the air and the sea to sit at equilibrium between them?
@Nbwest6093 жыл бұрын
Sometimes you want a boat and not a hovercraft.
@CharliMorganMusic3 жыл бұрын
I can't stop building spaceships bc my AI keep running me into every goddamn island it finds.
@Pointclearius3 жыл бұрын
@@CharliMorganMusic Try adjusting the estimated turning circle, surprisingly it helps somehow?
@JohnIainMcFarlanewaspfactor3 жыл бұрын
My 50+yrs as an amateur historian of military aircraft is still going on,but until I came across one of your videos I knew nothing of ships.But I enjoyed that so much I subbed and devoured your information very quickly.So now I have 2 subjects to educate myself on and I am always stunned at the depth of your knowledge.Just wanted to thank you for your content.Deep and thorough.Excellent resource!
@davidangelo89023 жыл бұрын
this is a concise and still interesting thumbnail sketch of a very complex subject. Congratulations on striking a good balance between complexity & brevity and giving an understandable overview of the issues & choices in warship hull design!!!
@robinmilford24263 жыл бұрын
Many years ago I attended what I think was the first meeting of the historical group of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects, in the hope that I would learn something about the reasons behind ship designs. I concluded that it was a talking shop for academic historians to score debating points off one another, and never went again. Drach does a far better job all on his own!
@stephenrickstrew72373 жыл бұрын
It’s the Fairest Curve that drives the Sailors and the Naval architects Mad …and incompressible water becomes quite displeased when it is displaced …the Hydrofoil being the latest rage amongst kiters and windsurfers and dingy sailors..and Zippy ferry boat operators …. So Cool to watch ..
@evensgrey3 жыл бұрын
From what I can see, hydrofoils have seriously disappointed many operators that have tried them. Military hydrofoils (as the US Navy tried them) were an operational failure (they cost too much to operate to be justified by what they could do, making them fairly small vessels with the basic problem of battleships: They are astonishingly good for certain things, but you can accomplish the same jobs for less money in other ways). It's difficult to use hydrofoils in the Atlantic, because the Atlantic tends to be fairly rough most of the time, and hydrofoils don't like rough waters. (It makes it hard to get up to the speed where the hydrofoils start being able to lift you hull out of the water, and a tall wave that hits your hull can really give your vessel a bad knock, so transitions can be quite nasty in more marginal sea conditions. I rode in a hydrofoil on Lake Ontario a couple of times about 40 years and, and half the time it was too rough for them to use their hydrofoils on nice, clear summer days. We get WIND in Ontario in the summertime. There have been attempts to restart a hydrofoil ferry between Toronto and some point on the Canadian side near the Niagara River, but they have previously fallen through, mostly because there's a very limited market for a marginally faster way to get to an area that has a fairly niche tourism industry built on wine and theater. There's now a rather amusing try at an electric hydrofoil ferry service, and they're making the cute claim of having no wake. The fact a hydrofoil disturbs the water less than a similarly sized conventional ship means a much smaller wake, but not NO wake.) There are successful Mediterranean hydrofoil car ferries, but the Mediterranean is notable for being like the Pacific: It's usually really calm, except when it's really, REALLY not. It also has a huge advantage for a car ferry service that there's a number of big islands with large populations and lots of stuff to attract visitors who find it very useful to take their cars with them because those islands are that big, and there are these bodies of water that divide major countries on the northern coast from each other and can be much more quickly crossed on a fast ship than driven around.
@stephenrickstrew72373 жыл бұрын
@@evensgrey Exactly plus Foils are delicate… great if your on a Kite Board or small dingy … our Carrier routinely visited Naples Italy and they had those ferry’s zipping around on their Foils going to Capri .. but their is no way your getting a 60,000 ton carrier up on a Foil … yet … but even those new Zumwalt class are a big disappointment… plus they corrode to pieces … besides when your at sea the coolest thing is to go forward and watch the bow cutting trough the ocean ..
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
Short in coastal boats, the German Schnellebooten beat all. Their Diesels went from 800 to 1500 hp on the same displacement during the war, simply due to technological advancements. PT Boats and Vospers were very well in the south Pacific and the Med, but a handful of E-boats could kill a destroyer. They could go over 60 knots in the North Sea by the end of the war, in almost any conditions. Displacement hulls and huge power plants fueled with diesel. Very tough nuts to crack.
@stephenrickstrew72373 жыл бұрын
@@georgesoros6415 Excellent Point …. I hope Drach does a E boat episode or episodes there is nothing out there about those fascinating craft ….cause pound for pound they and the u boats really did a lot of damage … if Germany had started the war with 300 E and 300 U boats … it might have gone somewhat differently….?
@5peciesunkn0wn2 жыл бұрын
@@stephenrickstrew7237 It would be a hilarious sight to see. A carrier going almost 50 knots on several rows of hydrofoils. Certainly harder to torpedo lol. Would definitely be completely unviable on a battleship though, lol.
@kylebroflovski53333 жыл бұрын
This is very similar to what we discuss in Aerospace when we look at stability for aircraft, so a very interesting video for me.
@Jacob-W-55703 жыл бұрын
side fact: transom stern. in modern merchant ships, it's there to keep the deck at full width all the way to the aft. To keep the speed up, we usually load/trim it so the transom stays OUT of the water. Just for those vortexes. because they drag ALOT.
@napalmholocaust90933 жыл бұрын
"Free board" comes from the first (and usually only) side plank tied on with cords to a dugout canoe. One on each side. They had them in Britain during the stone age.
@Keaperman3 жыл бұрын
Ok, I confess, I was More confused about how Hull shapes works after I listened to this at work then before. ;) Thats not a criticism, thats a a compliment on a well done 1 hour condensed video on a very complex subject. Maybe after I have listened to it about 10 times I will understand it. :)
@sawyerawr57833 жыл бұрын
ditto.
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
Go buy the simplest of watercraft. Own it for ten years. Then watch this again, and you will be eternally grateful to Drach.
@calvingreene903 жыл бұрын
I certainly have to believe that copying a shape that is good for the performance you want is more likely to give good results than a random shape that just feels lucky.
@patrickchase56143 жыл бұрын
If technology is completely static and uniform across nations, then that will eventually become true as everybody evolves toward the same optimum. In reality the constraints were ever-changing and not uniform from one power to the next, and there was therefore strong incentive to innovate. In the days before tank testing (and more recently CFD/FEA) the only way to achieve that was to take some risks with new ship designs, and the marine architects' intuitions therefore played a role.
@calvingreene903 жыл бұрын
@@patrickchase5614 Are you sure you understand the meaning of the word "random".
@patrickchase56143 жыл бұрын
@@calvingreene90 Yes, I do, and back in the day the designers did some remarkably "random" stuff (by modern standards) with their hull designs, often with disastrous consequences. I thought that was what you were alluding to and was trying to explain why.
@sawyerawr57833 жыл бұрын
Rear Admiral Popov would like you know your location....
@reiniernn90713 жыл бұрын
Very nice explained al lot of things about the hulls. Thank you for this. I would like to share my thoughts about sailing ships (42 minutes). The propulsion of a sail is indeed high above the center of gravity.And it can push down the bow , especially from the mid mast. But we have also sails far before resp after the point of gravity. It is possible to lift the bow with the most front sails (like a spinnaker on a modern sailing boat). The next following...It is not the sail pushing to the mast and the mast pushing the ship forward. It's the rigging which bear the most (pulling) force to the ships hull. For what I know about sailing: The mast is mostly to keep the sails high up above the ship .
@HoverLambo3 жыл бұрын
Im reminded of a comment in "rebuilding the Royal Navy" (dk brown/G.Moore); "It was said that you became a true propeller designer, when you ceased to think of a propeller as driving a ship, and started to think of the ship as a mere obstruction to the flow into the propeller"
@martinsportfoto24233 жыл бұрын
When the aspect of stability is brought upp, the ship model Drach shows makes me, as a Swede, slowly blush ...
@Herr_ramisu3 жыл бұрын
no day where i'm not astonished about the effort people make to bring free accessible knowledge to the world thank you
@Manuelslayor3 жыл бұрын
A feew more years of watching this chanel and i will be able to build my own navy!
@jameshill68173 жыл бұрын
Brilliant photos and diagrams. Often I listen to rum rations and drydocks as audio-only podcasts, but I absolutely needed visual support on these relatively complex issues of buoyancy, gravity, righting moment etc Thanks.
@Ensign_Cthulhu3 жыл бұрын
Its a pity David K Brown is gone. His books were the ones that got me into this stuff. He would have made a wonderful interview subject for you.
@frankmiller953 жыл бұрын
From a retired deck officer and sailboat captain, great job on a complex subject.
@westcumbriantransportfilms43643 жыл бұрын
Was reading about this subject in a book earlier this week, 'Battleship, Design and Development 1905-1945 by Norman Friedman, rather a interesting subject and video, along with the boiler, propulsion and armaments videos previously posted.
@Axel02043 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Drach!. The topics covered in this video are the prime focus of my department where I work, and you've done an outstanding job of distilling amazingly complex subjects down to their basics.
@rem264393 жыл бұрын
Another great episode of 'naval history and morning coffee' Thank you Drach!
@maasbekooy9013 жыл бұрын
32:28 if you assume you keep the same underwatervolume, a shalower draft is more stable: BM (boyancypoint-Metacentre) = (Ixx)/(volume) With a square hull: BM = B / (12T^2) B=breete (with), T=tief (depth) T stands under the division line so the larger the depth, the lower the stability
@L0stEngineer3 жыл бұрын
Dry jokes to add to this subject from the channel "Not what you think" The efficient bulbous bow on modern warship always looks like this, even when it's not excited.
@dokkisse90753 жыл бұрын
Happy 600th video drach!
@Terminator4843 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a similar discussion about submarine hullform designs... specifically about the physics of blunt cigar-shaped bows, and why they are better than sharpened prows, and why it wouldn't be even better to simply emulate the shape of a fast-swimming fish's head.
@russelldold48273 жыл бұрын
So, it ALL depends ... Great treatment of the subject. Amazing what was achieved before the advent of modern computational methods.
@vikkimcdonough61532 жыл бұрын
57:00 - Being longer and thinner can also hurt your speed directly if you take it too far. As the ship's aspect ratio increases, its surface-to-volume ratio also increases; if displacement is held constant, this translates into an increase in wetted area, which, in turn, increases the frictional drag on the hull as it moves through the water, _and_ the wetted area (which is directly proportional to the frictional drag) increases faster and faster as you keep increasing the aspect ratio. Past a certain point, going longer and thinner will actually _increase_ your overall drag, as the increase in wetted area will add more drag than you save by decreasing the ship's frontal area. (The balance between pressure drag and frictional drag is also important for aircraft, and is one of the big reasons why you don't tend to see a lot of airliners with enormously long, skinny fuselages, nor ones with stubby, bloated ones.)
@mmullaley3 жыл бұрын
At 33:39 into the video there is a pic of ships layed up. There's a carrier there with 29 painted on the deck. USS Santee is her name and my uncle Ralf Kennedy served on her WWII. Video played on but for some reason I backed it up, googled the ship, and it was the Santee. Ralf passed a number of years back, these ships were disposable...nice to see a pic of her.
@erikgranqvist36803 жыл бұрын
My grandfather on my fathers side built a small rowing boat in his youth, with his brother. Just before WW2. My grandfather said it was sturdy, and slightly worse handling then a half sunken log.
@cliveradvan34143 жыл бұрын
While looking for general information about hull design relating to kayak hull shape and stability i happened upon this presentation. Very interesting topic and while i wasn't looking for such in depth information about large ships and certainly came away with more general knowledge about ship design. And of course now i know what i need to consider for my next kayak build with regards to gun placement!
@HEDGE10113 жыл бұрын
Drach, this was an outstanding video. While I can’t definitively say I got it all on the first pass, you definitely addressed and resolved some questions I’ve had. Of particular note is the discussion of free surface effect. I’m not sure it’s worth a video on its own, but I’d like to learn more about this phenomena (which I first learned about after the loss of the “Herald of Free Enterprise”). While I always think of it as at its worst on ferries, I was wondering if the compartmentalization on warships nullified the effect; it seems like it reduces it but doesn’t eliminate the threat.
@billbrockman7793 жыл бұрын
It was an interesting overhead photo around minute 34:00. You can see by the light cruisers moored with the CVL’s that they share a hull.
@invadegreece92813 жыл бұрын
Ah yes for instance Cleveland and Princeton
@d.cypher29203 жыл бұрын
Good sir: it's ALL about hydrodynamics. (Hull speed that is.) *unless you use foils. And, then it's still about hydrodynamics* 😎🇺🇸
@thurbine24116 ай бұрын
I am more interested in aerodynamics and aerial radar but your videos together with some books about naval warfare have made me really appreciate how interesting targets can be. Also I have always loved sailing so engineering+boats is fun
@stevewindisch74003 жыл бұрын
Lol, the photo at 29:00 .. The South Dakota class BB has the number 2 turret pointed back directly at the bridge of the store ship that is along side. One can imagine the Captain saying: "No, we will take ALL the chicken." Regarding a difference with modern sailboats, the latest hydrodynamic factor mentioned is "Wetted Surface" which refers to how much hull is underwater. This is why modern racers usually have a dish-shaped hull which seems rather shallow for the size (the main hull having less draft and a little more beam, although the narrow wing style keel sticks down quite a bit, often with a big lead-weighted bulb at the bottom for added stability). This can extend the "Hull Speed" of a boat which is the maximum speed of a non-planing hull that can be achieved without exerting exponentially greater power. Such boats are not known for sea-keeping, and many long-range or family cruisers prefer more traditional full "Displacement" hull shapes for comfort and safety. Warships probably can't go that route, they need the volume and stability of a fuller hull. But I suspect if they did for some reason, they could get by with dramatically less horsepower for the same speed, and therefor much smaller engine and fuel spaces.
@bertbaker70672 жыл бұрын
@~11:15, apologies in advance if I'm breaking a rule about comment posts. The yt channel Casual Navigation has a few videos breaking down the physics or ship stability too, if anyone was curious to learn more.
@michaelblaszkiewicz72833 жыл бұрын
R.I.P James D. Hornfischer
@JamieSteam3 жыл бұрын
Oh he passed away!? Amazing writer. RIP.
@idaho_girl3 жыл бұрын
I'm a physicist as such I like to think am no dummy but I'm also no naval architect. Having collaborated with engineers, I've learned from them that once you try to optimize around more than one principle, compromises must be made and the math and details can be super messy. So, from someone who is no expert but I like to think has some smarts, I wanted to tell you that I thought I learned quite a bit and that you did an excellent job striking that balance of explaining complex ideas conceptually. Well Done!
@waverleyjournalise57573 жыл бұрын
"Make it long, make it concave. What do you mean, rough seas?" - Designers of the -Coke bottle- Iowa Class
@invadegreece92813 жыл бұрын
Lol
@satannstuff3 жыл бұрын
"Great hull design" - captain Larry
@williamthornburgh36753 жыл бұрын
This may be your best technical video ever. LOVED this.
@salaminshikiya93513 жыл бұрын
Many thanks for this great video, Drachinifel, and in as simple as you can get in this broad and complex topic. So in short, it's all about compromises, there is no perfect hull form. The best design you can get would be one with the best compromise you're willing to accept. No wonder engineering is about getting the best compromise from what I've heard. Oh, and I would like to know more on those other factors in hull design you mentioned, please.
@kurumi3943 жыл бұрын
Me building ships in Kerbal Space Program: _hmm yes this shall aid me greatly in my endeavors_
@kieranh20053 жыл бұрын
And here I just thought more rockets was the solution to everything.
@spanishcastlesinspace28993 жыл бұрын
very interesting and neat to learn more about why ships look like they do
@mytech67792 жыл бұрын
Your intro reminded me of a trip to the central public library(20 years ago) when I was getting interested in sailing and considering building my own boat. After reading a bunch of introductory stuff I was searching the catalog and found a naval architecture book listed as located in "the stacks", I went to the reference desk and 10 minutes later they come back an drop a huge book on the counter. I skimmed it for an hour or two, and it was chock full of all the diagrams and equations you would want when creating a high end program to simulate the performance of hull shape, ballast, control and propulsion. Never bothered to request that book again.(Though my interest also shifted from boats to aircraft.)
@Beaguins3 жыл бұрын
I would love to see something like this about submarine design. I wonder how much it's like aircraft design, given that the fluid is all around instead of located in one area.
@vikingskuld3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing video thank you. Even though this is only the first video of yours I have seen I subscribed. I figure if you put half as much time and info in every other video you do it's worth watching. That was one of the most informative vids I ever seen on KZbin. Thank u especially for such a difficult subject
@ReneSchickbauer3 жыл бұрын
Hulls: The thing that makes your ship float. Except for swedish warships going on maiden voyages in 1628...
@frankark10463 жыл бұрын
After seen this, I love my brick!! But then again this is a little bit over the average nuts and bolt videos, but still very informative. Keep up the amasing work!!!
@SolarWraith3 жыл бұрын
This makes me appreciate Scotty even more; just imagine the engineering shenanigans of a starship.
@kieranh20053 жыл бұрын
Especially when the idiots on the command deck keep demanding more power...
@stevewyckoff69043 жыл бұрын
The only guy in a red shirt who's still alive.
@hughfisher98203 жыл бұрын
Spaceship designers have it much easier, no air or water resistance, no buoyancy or metacentric height. Bricks fly quite nicely in space. (But still have to worry about the thrust line relative to centre of mass as Drach said about sails vs engines. The Enterprise should pitch itself nose down into a roll with those off-axis nacelles.)
@Destroyer_V03 жыл бұрын
@@hughfisher9820 slightly angling the thrust exhaust so it goes through the centre of mass, and countering with manouvering engines of some description would make it possible to fly in a straight line. Less efficient, yes. But possible
@georgesoros64153 жыл бұрын
But Scotty was the very model of a WWI engineering officer at Jutland, where Scots couldn't be line officers, by law, as incredibly stupid as that might sound, so they made up almost all the engineering officers in the RN. Their reputation was that the snotty brit captains would issue impossible orders, yet they would carry them out, just to get at the snotty bastards. So Star Trek, always wanting to be inclusive, but realistic, made Doohan the engineering officer, which I fancy was entirely appropriate, just as Sulu was the typical Japanese WWII officer (quiet and respectful an competent) and Chekhov was the typical Russian officer Obeying orders but always questioning and troublemaking. And surly. All because Whitehall thought Scotsmen too stupid to be line officers (but apparently not too stupid to beat back the Russian heavy cavalry at Sevastopol nor the Afghans at the Khyber Pass, dying to the last man nor a thousand other places..... Yet when Beatty crapped himself at Jutland, he replaced Jellicoe. Go figure that shit out.
@jeffreyplum52593 жыл бұрын
My friend, Howard Gradin, found a damage control chart on the USS Salem. It showed speeds for various engine and propeller conditions, ( ?Damaged shafts might be locked, creating drag. ) He was impressed by the increased power required to push the ship to its top speed versus something a few knots slower. Officially it had a 33 knot top speed. I do not know what her actual speed might be operationally. Atomic aircraft carriers have have rumored top speed in the 40 knot plus area. atomic power providing the insane grunt needed to push them to such classified speeds. My friend reported seeing Green ( solid, non foaming) water was seen over the B ( higher front ) turret, in very heavy weather. This was on a auto loading 8" gun cruiser. Great work! .
@allangibson24083 жыл бұрын
Some nuclear submarines are rumoured to be capable of 70+kts submerged (Russian Alfa) because both the reactors are capable of delivering the power and the high pressure around the propeller prevents cavitation. The down side is that it is VERY noisy due to vortex shedding. This does however make them fast enough to out run a lot of torpedoes (other than the 200kt Russian Shkval). Note the Shkval cannot be launched at above 50kts.
@BrushQuill3 жыл бұрын
Really interesting video. I learnt a ton about buoyancy as well as hulls! Your thoughts on stability made me think of the modern (well 80s) supertankers which were certainly wider than tall. Edit: We have seen wooden and metal warships. Lots of racing craft now are carbon fibre or fibreglass. Do you think we will see warships made of the same material & the effects thereof on hulls.
@gregorywright49183 жыл бұрын
Some warships already made with fiberglass hulls. Plus Kevlar and similar protective sheets are made from polymers.
@tomppeli.3 жыл бұрын
I love these dives in to a certain subject series
@hariman77273 жыл бұрын
This is like a 3D balancing puzzle where you have 37 hanging platforms and 83 different weights that you need to distribute perfectly to complete the puzzle. Oh, and some of the hanging bars push up on other bars, making it even more complex.
@ymer2343 жыл бұрын
I went into this video with the question about the flat vs pointy stern. Thank you for answering that, let alone in the last 5 minutes! 😂
@admiralholland39963 жыл бұрын
22:07 thats more like capsizing than rolling Drach i support it's still a running joke
@keithmoriyama54212 жыл бұрын
Normally I don't have the neuron power to digest such a complex topic, except I understand this topic intimately from first hand experience-- I kayak. A kayak is the only craft where you 'wear' the boat on your body and it is 100% your energy. It is really eye opening to experience the impact small differences in hull design make, coupled with materials, length/beam ratios but, most of all shape. When it's your body paying the price-- you learn real fast.
@ricardokowalski15793 жыл бұрын
"floats better than a brick" is similar to what was said about the space shuttle "glides better than a typewritter"
@admanpaulandrew3 жыл бұрын
Brilliantly done Drach
@patrickchase56143 жыл бұрын
The runaway cycle of increasing displacement at 24:48 has a name: It's known as the "Iowa class"
@The_Bermuda_Nonagon3 жыл бұрын
Your thumbnail for this video brought a smile to my face, I recognized the Mathew Baker illustration instantly from a book on warships I received at about age 10 which has sparked a lifelong interest in warships and warship design. : )
@noname117spore3 жыл бұрын
25:30 -ish: That sounds like the rocket equation to me. Just... on a warship.
@yobeefjerky423 жыл бұрын
Hello there friend
@noname117spore3 жыл бұрын
@@yobeefjerky42 hello
@idaho_girl3 жыл бұрын
I get that reference I salute you! :-)
@magnuslauglo53562 жыл бұрын
Fascinating, accessible, and informative.
@Kevin_Kennelly3 жыл бұрын
In regards to trireme speed, Wouldn't it be a lot easier to just add a second drummer to the oar deck? About the early USN monitors being compared to a 'heavily armed raft'. How long did it takes to inflate one of them? Did they use an air pump? Or just blow into the red valve?
@brookeshenfield71563 жыл бұрын
...second drummer... LOL. Mahalo for that.
@Ugly_German_Truths3 жыл бұрын
You realize that (wooden) rafts were a thing MILLENIA before inflatable rubber craft became a thing and started to abuse the name? Sadly one has to ask such thing today with the state of US education...
@brookeshenfield71563 жыл бұрын
@@Ugly_German_Truths You demean American education with your made-up-concern. Where did you go to school to think all Americans think rubber rafts came first?
@gregsmith17193 жыл бұрын
I've watched many and they're all great! Keep it up!
@nightshade77453 жыл бұрын
You can treat air as incompressible as well if you’re dealing with a subsonic plane
@ellagrant61903 жыл бұрын
I find this stuff fascinating and very useful for designing ships in From the Depths and similar games. Sure, the game is not a simulation but it's detailed enough that you can apply a lot of real world lessons to it. Thank you for this.
@Bob.W.3 жыл бұрын
I sit in my house and watch tugs on the Mississippi River. The barges they push are essentially hollow bricks.
@Niinsa623 жыл бұрын
This was really helpful, and fun to watch! Now I'm looking forward to the 84 hour version!
@johnjephcote76363 жыл бұрын
At 14.50 I was thinking about SS Waratah. Her hesitancy in righting a roll so worried one passenger (observing his bath water) that he left at Durban. The ship subsequently disappeared (1909).
@SkylersRants3 жыл бұрын
Yes, but apparently he added, that he had been disturbed by visions he saw in dreams during the voyage of a man "dressed in a very peculiar dress, which I had never seen before, with a long sword in his right hand, which he seemed to be holding between us. In the other hand he had a rag covered with blood.
@Isolder743 жыл бұрын
A hullform test tank, something that give you so much information when doing this.
@mytube0013 жыл бұрын
Alternate title: Drach goes physics teacher!
@aswd45-mk143 жыл бұрын
I found this video really good! I’m glad KZbin recommend it. You have a new sub! Really well explain with a d’inamicale and calm voice. Really enjoyable to listen and watch!
@MrAwsomenoob3 жыл бұрын
Floaty log best design 👌
@wafflesnfalafel13 жыл бұрын
that's a really nice vid - the explanation of the stability/roll of the ship was particularly good
@lukashei18703 жыл бұрын
But Drach, there are ships which can turn themselves upright again! Most Rescue-Cruisers of the German Seaborne Rescue Society are built to be able to save themselves from capsizing.
@Drachinifel3 жыл бұрын
Yep, there's very specific and highly advanced engineering that goes into them, include absolute watertightness. :)
@MoA-Reload...3 жыл бұрын
All the all weather RNLI lifeboats are self righting too and their design are nothing short of an engineering marvel. They also have the astonishingly good ability to maintain near their top speed regardless of sea state. Severn class tops out around 20knts in flat calm and they'll do that in just about anything you throw at it whereas boats similar size would be mad to even head out and larger ships can lose a hell of a lot of speed. So while Severn isn't that fast on paper, they designed her to achieve that speed in all weather's. Add in that they're remarkably good at taking much larger ships under tow plus some other party tricks as well you'll get why I claimed "engineering marvels" 😉
@Darth.Fluffy3 жыл бұрын
@@Drachinifel ......so....not the Vasa? Lol.... And three minutes later, a beautiful model of her crash diving!
@markhamstra10833 жыл бұрын
At a very different scale and purpose, monohull sailing yachts that are not strongly self-righting are considered to be dangerously deficient designs.
@matejlieskovsky96253 жыл бұрын
@@markhamstra1083 yup, yachts being self-righting to a heel of 100+ degrees is not too unusual.
@steinskotmyr21943 жыл бұрын
Very interesting indeed. Hope to see a video on how to calculate hull displacement in the future, not only today, but the history of its development from the times they did shipbuilding by experience and tradition.
@Szopen7153 жыл бұрын
As an aeronautics engineer, so someone who designs things moving through air, I can assure You that compressibility of air causes major problems, and it would be better if it weren't
@mddunlap033 жыл бұрын
It changing it density can get annoying but would take it over trying to move things through a non comparable fluid like water. You would just watch anything that tried to re enter the atmosphere explode like it just came from Orbital speeds into the side of a mountain
@belacickekl75793 жыл бұрын
Not half the headache viscosity causes! (Well, specifically, turbulent flows)
@allangibson24083 жыл бұрын
And in process industries compressibility effects of air is actually very useful (especially for turbocompressors)…
@notbobrosss36703 жыл бұрын
That was brilliantly informative. Thank you and well done.
@lordbaysel31353 жыл бұрын
Aren't you worried about someone asking for 84 hours course in patreon drydock?
@hariman77273 жыл бұрын
There's already disappointed comments that want exactly that. My comment thanks Drach for the short version. I do not have 84 hours to spare.