|
|
|
| United States Patent | 5191849 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5191849.html |
| Inventor(s) | Labrucherie; Mark (105 ru du Champ de Mont, Varanval 60880 le Meux, FR);
Tollet; Daniel (Regence Park, Apartment 313, Avenue Jean Moulin, 83400 Hyeres, FR) |
| Abstract | A multi-hulled boat has at least three hulls, with the outside hulls
extending forward beyond the central or inside hull or hulls. The hulls
are tapered with a cross-sectional configuration that increases in side
front to rear, thus forming a channel or tunnel between adjacent hulls
which decreases in cross-sectional size front to rear. Air entering the
tunnels is compressed, thus imparting a lifting force to the hulls lifting
the hulls partially out of the water to decrease the hydraulic drag on the
hulls. The hulls have identical cross-sectional areas at identical
transverse planar sections thereof. The bottom of each hull is flat and
inclined at an angle with the horizontal. The hull bottoms join the hull
sides at a chamfer which increases in size front to rear. Shutters or
flaps may be used to partially or fully close off the tunnels between the
hulls to control airflow or to trap water-borne material to be collected
and recycled. |
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
|
|
|
Drawing from US Patent 5191849 |
|
|
Multi-hulled boat |
|
| Inventor |
Labrucherie; Mark (105 ru du Champ de Mont, Varanval 60880 le Meux, FR);
Tollet; Daniel (Regence Park, Apartment 313, Avenue Jean Moulin, 83400 Hyeres, FR) |
|
|
|
| Publication Date |
March 9, 1993 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention generally concerns designs of boat hulls and more
particularly to multi-hulled boats.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Boats having several parallel hulls already exist and are well known. For
instance, boats with two hulls are known as "catamarans." There are also
three-hulled boats, or "trimarans" wherein the central hull is longer than
the side hulls, with the side hulls used more as stabilizing floats rather
than as hulls proper.
In French Patent No. 2,586,001, there is disclosed a four-hulled boat in
which the central or inside hulls are shorter in length than the side or
outside hulls. Such a hull structure helps improve the boat's performance
by reducing its draft and improving its stability.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention concerns a boat having at least three parallel hulls
attached to the underside of the boat bottom, with each central or inside
hull being shorter in length than the side hulls with the rear walls of
each hull being coplanar and with the front edge of each inside hull set
back from the front edge of the side hulls. The purpose of the present
invention is to provide such a multi-hulled boat with improved or enhanced
performance characteristics which require less powerful motors to propel
the boat.
To accomplish this goal, the cross-sectional of the outside hulls and the
inside hulls increases continuously from fore to aft, and the side walls
of each hull are planar and generally vertical.
An inverted trough is thus formed by the boat bottom and the hull sidewalls
of adjacent hulls defining an air passage or "tunnel" as described
hereinbelow. Because the outside hulls are longer than the inside hulls
and extend forward of the inside hulls at the front of the boat, the
outside hulls form a type of funnel, forcing the air to rush into the
tunnels created by the space between adjacent hulls. Because the width of
the tunnels decreases fore to aft, the air pressure within each tunnel
increases from fore to aft, providing the boat with a lifting force. When
the boat is lifted from the water, the submerged volume is reduced,
allowing the boat to obtain excellent performance while requiring a lower
power output from the boat's motors.
Another feature of the present invention is that the bottom of each hull is
substantially flat and is tilted at an angle of 0.5.degree. to 5.degree.
with the horizontal. As the boat begins to lift upward with an increase in
speed, the flat, sloped bottoms of the hulls create an aerodynamic drag
which produces a dynamic lift. The preferred angle of tilt of the hulled
bottoms is preferably between 1.degree. and 3.degree..
Yet another advantage to the present invention is that the downward-facing
surface of the boat's bottom which covers the tops of the hulls slopes
upwardly from rear to front. Preferably, the downward-facing surface of
the boat bottom is roughly parallel to the bottom surface of the hulls. As
a result, the height of the tunnel separating adjacent hulls diminishes
from front to rear which further enhances the phenomenon of air
compression, once again improving aerodynamic lift. It should be noted
that the air compression is accomplished with a perfectly laminar airflow
due to the overall profile of the hulls as described hereinabove.
To facilitate the manufacturing of the hulls and give the hulls good shock
absorption characteristics in water, the bottom of each hull is connected
to each lateral or side wall of each hull by means of a flat,
partially-tilted surface, forming a chamfer. The angle of this chamfer
decreases continuously from back to front in conjunction with the the tilt
of the hull bottom until the chamfer is totally horizontal at the front
part of the hull. Consequently, the height of the chamfer determines the
slope of the bottom of each hull.
The backs of each hull all lay in a single plane perpendicular to the
boat's axis and the hulls are all identically sized and shaped, and thus
all have identical cross-sections at identical points along their lengths
to the front of the shortest hulls. This feature makes construction of the
boat easier because all hulls are identical from the back to the front of
the shortest hulls. The outside hulls, which are longer than the shorter
inside hulls, have streamlined extensions built at the front to enable the
outside hulls to extend forward beyond the ends of the inside hulls.
Each tunnel between adjacent hulls may be equipped with a flap or shutter
hinged horizontally at its fore-edge under the boat bottom between
adjacent hulls, roughly at the mid-length of the boat, each shutter having
a control means, such as a hydraulic jack to adjust, if need be, the
airflow through the tunnels and, thereby, the tilt of the boat.
This type of boat which may have, for example, four hulls or more, has
advantages because of the lift capability it features, which enables the
use of a smaller engine to drive the boat than if the hulls did not lift
out of the water while the boat is under way. Furthermore, it should be
noted that it is an advantage to increase the number of low-powered
engines used by placing one such engine in each hull, thereby providing an
extra margin of safety because in the case of the failure of one engine,
the boat can sail on using the other engines. The engines can be
conventional propeller-driving type engines or surface propulsive engines
of the hydrojet type. In accordance with the usable volume within the boat
hulls and the lightness of the construction, the boat can be made
unsinkable by filling each hull with expanded thermoplastic material such
as polystyrene rated, for example, at 30 kilograms per cubic meter.
Such a boat can be used either for leisure or for more commercial purposes
such as transporting passengers or as ferries for carrying cars and
freight. In any case, the boat is lifted from the water as it reaches the
speed of about 15 knots and the submerged surface area is greatly reduced
because the length of the water line is reduced by two-thirds while the
boat is cruising.
It is also possible to consider other uses for this type of boat, such as
helping in the battle against pollution by collecting trash floating on
the water utilizing the tunnels between the different hulls to pick up
floating waste due to the flaps hinged along the aft edge of the hulls and
to store the waste in settling or collecting bins at the back of the boat.
The invention will be more easily understood upon a consideration of the
accompanying drawings. The drawings herein show the boat in a
configuration intended for leisure use, but is not intended to limit the
scope of the invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a side view of a boat embodying the present invention;
FIG. 2 is front view of the boat shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a rear view of the boat shown in FIG. 1; and
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view along line IV--IV of FIG. 1.
As shown in the drawings, and referring to FIGS. 2 and 3, a boat 1 of the
present invention has four hulls in two sets of two identical hulls each,
namely, two outside hulls 2 and two inside hulls 3. The backs 9 of each
outside hull 2 and each central hull 3 are coplanar in a plane
perpendicular to the fore-and-aft axis of the boat.
As shown in the drawings, each outside hull 2 and inside hull 3 has a
generally triangular shape as viewed from a horizontal plane above the
hulls with the width of each hull increasing continuously from front to
rear. Furthermore, as shown particularly in FIG. 3, side walls 4 of each
hull 2, 3 are substantially vertical and planar or flat.
As best seen in FIG. 4, hulls 2, 3 are identical in shape, size and
construction. Preferably 2, 3 are assembled to boat 1 with rear walls 9
aligned in a single plane perpendicular to the fore-and-aft axis of boat
1. Thus, the cross-sectional shapes and areas of all hulls will be
identical when measured at identical points along the hulls' lengths.
In accordance with yet another feature of the present invention, and as
shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, bottom 5 of each hull is substantially flat and
sloped upward from rear to front at an angle between 0.5.degree. and
5.degree., preferably at an angle between 1.degree. and 3.degree. as
measured from the horizontal.
The bottom 5 of each hull is connected to the corresponding sides 4 by a
flat, partially tilted hull surface 6 forming a chamfer. The height or
size of chamfer 6 decreases continuously from back to front as a result of
the tilt of each hull bottom 5. This shape results in easy-to-build
low-cost hulls that can be made of low density metal or metal alloys such
as aluminum alloy.
As seen in FIG. 4, the hulls are assembled conventionally, using transverse
braces 7 to impart lateral rigidity and stability to hull walls 4.
The fact that the cross-sections of outside hulls 2 and inside hulls 3 are
identical along the entire lengths of the hulls extending to the front
edges 10 of the shortest hulls facilitates manufacturing and allows
manufacturing to be standardized, as the two outside hulls 2 are the same
in shape as inside hulls 3 except for streamlined extensions 11 attached
at the front of each side hull 2.
Hulls 2 and 3 are attached one to the other to boat bottom 8 lower surface.
In a preferred embodiment, bottom 8 is pitched upward from rear to front.
This pitched feature, as well as the increasing cross-sectional area of
the hulls front to back contributes to reducing the size of the air
passage between adjacent hulls which enhances the lift phenomenon.
As seen in FIGS. 2 and 3, a tunnel 12 is formed between each pair of
adjacent hulls, each said tunnel 12 being defined by a pair of opposed
hull sides walls 4 and bottom 8. As best seen in FIG. 4, each tunnel 12
has a larger cross-sectional area at its entry 13 than at its exit 14. As
best seen in FIG. 2, the tilt of bottom 8 also decreases the
cross-sectional area of each tunnel 12 along the tunnel length from front
to rear. The narrowing of each tunnel 12 along the path of airflow there
through compresses the air within the tunnels, causing the lift effect
described earlier.
As further shown in FIGS. 2, 3 and 4, adjacent hulls 2, 3 or 3, 3 are
spaced the same distance apart. All tunnels 12 are thus substantially
identically sized and shaped to present substantially identical flow paths
for air passing therethrough.
Referring now to FIG. 4, the numeral 15 indicates generally a shutter or
flap positioned approximately midway between entrance 13 and exit 14 of
tunnel 12. It is contemplated that one such shutter 15 may be placed
within each such tunnel 12. Adjusting controls (not herein specifically
shown) are provided to adjust the angle of shutter 15 and, consequently,
the extent to which shutter 15 covers or closes off tunnel 12. Shutter 15
may be variously used to trap or collect trash or debris within tunnel 12,
or to affect or control the degree to which hulls 2, 3 are lifted above
water line 16 while boat 1 is under way.
The boat shown in the accompanying drawings has a superstructure
corresponding to that of a yacht, but could also have other
superstructures as well as, for example, if the boat were designed to
collect trash on the water. In that case, it would be necessary to place
shutters in the tunnels to trap waste and direct it to settling tanks
which could also be located at the back of the boat.
As shown herein, the present invention demonstrates improvements to
existing boat construction techniques by offering a boat with a simple
design, high performance driven by low-powered motors which results in
savings both in terms of manufacturing costs as well as use and
maintenance.
The foregoing has described a specific embodiment of the present invention,
it is not intended that the invention be limited only to the example
herein described and shown. The present invention could also apply to a
variety of different boat configurations and the description is not
intended to limit the spirit and scope of the invention described and
claimed herein.
For example, the number of hulls can be different so long as the inside
hulls are shorter than the outside hulls to preserve the funnel system
which directs air to the tunnels between the hulls. In addition, the
tunnels could be closed off at their openings by attached shutters while
still remaining within the boundaries of the invention described herein.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|