grp on workboats, which often come alongside with bumbs and all? bad idea.
GRP survive bumping into thing far better than aluminium... 40 year old fishing boats up to 80 feets size here in Norway is proof of that... and even I have driven an GRP boat directly in to rocks at 20 knots, only damage was paint damage, and my pride.... all aluminium boats I have seen, get massive hull and sink.... so give me an good example why GRP is supposed to be weaker than aluminium.
that said, GRP is even harder to remodel when modified. also, we are speaking here about odysseus1980's vessels, which are 1. not designed as yachts. 2. have the engines forward, as shown by the actual casing for them.
Non of odysseus vessels are modifications, they are build from start to be like that. but hard to remodel a GRP boat... well this is word out from an person that know nothing about GRP (something you just show me now, one thing is to have education, but experience..... is far mush heavier than education, always). to modify an GRP hull is the easiest thing you can ever do, even a person with just basic knowledge can do that. I'll give you an example:
Lengthening a GRP hull (because it's one of the hardest things to get correct), I'll write it up in how it should be done:
1. clean the hull (must be spot free) (Aluminium vessel the same thing)
2. build an cast on that part of the hull you want lengthen at. (aluminium boats: doing measures and and cut the hull)
3. cast a new hull section in the cast that was made. and cut the hull in half while the cast is setting it self. (Aluminium: making all the ribs needed.)
4. place the new hull section in between the two hull half. (aluminium: placing out the ribs and start marking and measuring up the placement of each single ribs. a slow process)
5. Grinding the hull side, so you get an angled surface in the contact area between both hull, this is what making it strong. ( starting to get finish with measuring up where all new hull ribs shall be
6. (There is two ways to do it, I prefer this way, because it easier to do) In the area you need to cast the two hull together, add an smooth surfaced plate on the outside, and partially cover the other side with plastic fabric to the hull, and connect the vacuum system to it so it is ready. (Aluminium: ready to weld all ribs and the hull it self)
7. a combination of spraying GRP and placing GRP-mats, and close it all in under the plastic fabric. and start the vacum pump to get out all the air. (Aluminium hull still welding, ups this one I have to do again weld!)
8. hull finish cast, just need some painting and connecting new cables.... (aluminium hull still working on the welding, somethimes you need three layer of weld, and the you need to smoothen the surface other places...)
9. GRP boat on water. the Aluminium boat is still being worked on.
so, all you say after that is about yachts, especially of the type viksund builds, which are quite unlike these vessels. most of what you say, even if true, is unrelated.
In fact you are wrong again, Viksund delivered 500 work boats to the Norwegian Navy, like this one for exampel. notice how similar this one is to odysseus1980's...:
It's an 89 model (one of the last on in the series), it have been use to tow targets, it have been used as target, it have done all the dirty work, and still is intact. the only thing that keep bracking down on here is here engines! LOL
PDF on that boat, it's in Norwegian but it show 3-4 variant of the vessel on the same hull (3 different superstructure where 2 of them is just an enlarged superstructure of that one in the picture above)
http://www.viksundboats.no/uploads/prod ... /v1100.pdf
and yeah, all is better in norway and all of the world is still in the boat stone age. their ships go faster, work better they float in the sky and go supersonic! and also they are invisible. that is why nobody else can understand how they work.
heuhen, you don't have to learn me stuff I already know, especially as I can often pick the mistakes out of what you tell me easily. because even an norwegian mad viking doesn't know everything better then the rest of the world, and pretending to do so can piss people off
It also piss people of when an socald engineer going around beliving that a GRP boat can withstand anything, is hard to modify etc. when it is the opposite. we In Norway have done some crazy things up trough the years, and learned from them, we also have that bloody North sea to test things in.... could Norway have been placed somewhere with better weather.
First vessels built under lisence in 1967 and production continued for many years. Later vessels built on this hul are the D50/D54 and the D65/D74, with the number is LOA in feet. Some of the smaller are in use in large lakes, while other in sea. The larger hulls are pilot boats and workboats, even a small fire boat was developed on the D65/D74 hull. Most amblulances are of D45 type, while some larger D54 also exist. Most vessels use various Volvo Penta engines, with speeds from 18kn to 24kn. Among hulls built were leisure crafts with several different superstructures. Finally, a handful of lake cruisers built on D65/D74 hull.
leisure craft and lake cruiser is an another way of saying yacht!.......
only thing I have on his ...work-boats/yacht is that they are supposed to be build in 1967, boats with that type of design language come first in the start of the 80's. Viksund was out in 83, Azimut in 77
if we going totally nasty on GRP then we can start to talk about laminated GRP and sandwiched GRP.... and one of them can withstand gunfire..... that's fun. In fact a new thing here in Norway the small boats company's compete in how can build the strongest boat. and during the last 4 years some of them have used an special sort of strengthened Laminated GRP construction, making the vessel bulletproof up to 12'7mm guns! (Why the hell shall an private person need that), even the windows is bulletproof, oh some of them can turn it self around if it capsize... Norwegian you so silly! "When are we going to drive a boat in to a war-zone and capsize the boat!?!"