- The
fin keel is a
stationary foil
positioned amidships and
projecting downwards under the hull of a
sailing vessel. A
fin keel is
relatively short in a...
- The
keel is the bottom-most
longitudinal structural element of a watercraft. On some sailboats, it may have a
hydrodynamic and
counterbalancing purpose...
-
masthead sloop rig, an internally-mounted spade-type
rudder and a
fixed fin keel. It
displaces 10,000 lb (4,536 kg) and
carries 4,250 lb (1,928 kg) of ballast...
-
stabilizing fins,
bilge keels have a
major advantage in
their low
impact on
internal ship arrangements.
Unlike fins,
bilge keels do not have any components...
-
available in
three different keel configurations: The
fin keel version has a
draft of 1.15m (3'9") Also
known as twin
keel this
version is
easily trailerable...
-
shape of the
keel. A monohull's
keel is made
effective by a
combination of weight, depth, and length. Most
modern monohull boats have
fin keels,
which are...
-
single and twin
keels in a state-of-the-art context. When the
fin keeled and
lifting keel HEOLs have
raced each other, the
fin keel model has been shown...
- from the tail or
caudal fin, fish
fins have no
direct connection with the back bone and are
supported only by muscles. Fish
fins are
distinctive anatomical...
-
designed with a
fin keel, it will normally, also have a skeg-mounted rudder. A skeg on
rowing s**** is the
fin attached to the
keel of the s**** that...
-
structural keels, and are
nearly flat-bottomed and
often used
leeboards if
forced in open water,
while modern recreational keelboats have
prominent fixed fin keels...