Leeboard

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A Dutch sailing barge showing its stowed windward leeboard, hiked up with wind from starboard
Leeboard deployed on a Thames sailing barge on the East Swin
Modern sharpie fitted with leeboards
The Centennial a 1979 Ted Brewer sharpie fitted with leeboards

A leeboard is a form of pivoting keel used by a sailboat largely and very often in lieu of a fixed keel. Typically mounted in pairs on each side of a hull, leeboards function much like a centreboard, allowing shallow-draft craft to ply waters fixed keel boats cannot. Only the leeward side leeboard is used at any time, as it submerges when the boat heels under the force of the wind.

A disadvantage, where there is an inadequate fixed keel, is that they typically ship (bear) little ballast, which being on the far side delays the onset of unballasted craft's heeling, that is, to put up a good, constant resistance against the wind. The classical, archetypal definition of ballast is a low, central weight to optimise centre of mass, reduce turning moment and therefore resistance to the boat keeling over, however tends to be higher in self-righting vessels. Modern developments allow them to act as a speed-enhancing lifting foil.

History[edit]

Leeboards existed in China from at least the eighth century on warships that "held the ships, so that even when wind and wave arise in fury, they are neither driven sideways, nor overturn".[1] Leeboards for stabilizing junks and improving their capability to sail upwind, are documented from a book by Li Chuan. The innovation was transmitted to Portuguese and Dutch ships around 1570.[2][3][4] "The Portuguese experimented with caulking their vessels in the Chinese manner and the Dutch probably added leeboards to their craft that were copied from Chinese models."[5]

Leeboards have been used by relatively large inshore and coastal sailing vessels used for transport since 1570, such as Dutch barges, Thames barges, and American gundalows. For these boats, leeboards provided the advantages of shallow draught for working close inshore and an unobstructed hold for cargo. In particular, they allowed gundalows to take the hard to load and unload cargo in unimproved tidal areas, as well as readily conduct maintenance on their hulls. Leeboards were also easier to build than a large centreboard would have been.

Today[edit]

Leeboards are no longer common in commercially-built boats, because many people consider them inelegant and awkward. They are far more common in home-built boats, especially the Puddle Duck Racer and stitch and glue type sailboats. Leeboards simplify construction of the hull, as they are attached to the outside and do not require holes in the hull, which can leak. Since centreboards are retractable, they require a large, watertight trunk to hold them in place when retracted, and this occupies what otherwise might be useful space in the cabin or cockpit of the boat. Use of leeboards, while it adds complexity to the process of tacking, leaves the floor of the boat unobstructed.

According to traditional design principles, a boat utilizing a leeboard either needs to have two retractable leeboards, one on each side, or a method of removing the leeboard and attaching it to either side while under way, because nearly all sailboats tack to work their way upwind (with the exception of the proa). However, some small sailboat designers claim to have created seaworthy vessels with only a single, fixed leeboard.[6][7]

On a traditional two-leeboard (or non-fixed leeboard) design, the boards are designed so that the windward board can be retracted, to reduce drag. Unlike centreboards, which are symmetric along the boat's axis, leeboards are often asymmetric, so that they more efficiently provide lift in one direction.[clarification needed][citation needed] Some fast racing scows use bilgeboards, which are mounted between the centreline of the hull and the sides, so they can use a pair of asymmetric foils for maximum lift and minimum drag.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Li Ch'üan (759). Manual of the White and Gloomy Planet. cited byRobert Temple (1986). The Genius of China. Simon & Schuster.
  2. ^ Donald F. Lach (1977). Asia in the making of Europe. Volume II, A Century of Wonder. p. 403
  3. ^ Robert Temple (1986). The Genius of China. Simon & Schuster.
  4. ^ Rees, Charlotte Harris (2008). Secret Maps of the Ancient World. Authorhouse (published June 10, 2008). p. 102. ISBN 978-1434392787.
  5. ^ Donald F. Lach (1977). in the making of Europe. Volume II, A Century of Wonder. p. 403
  6. ^ "The Tridarka Raider: A Trimaran for Coastal Vagabonds: Deck Plan". WaterTribe. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  7. ^ Mike Mulcahy (May 2006). "My Take on Philsboat". Duckworks Magazine. Retrieved 8 February 2011.

External links[edit]