Now the
Now we all know that 1 cubic meter of foam on its own cant lift that weight,
So I tried to work out other factors that need to be taken into account.
The main one I think is that the hull would still has a rather large displacement even if full of water, that alone dramatically reduces the amount of buoyancy one needs for positive buoyancy , and as we know the boat wont float unless displacement of water is greater than the weight of the object,
So before the boat actually starts to really sink it has to take in water (weight) to overcome the normal positive buoyancy of the hull weight carrying capacity, know I know on my 20 footer I have had 8 adults and a couple of kids on the boat and she only dropped a couple of inches below her normal waterline, and thats a tiny displacement compared to the Mac (quick calculation 6 x adults @ 175lbea = 1408lb plus a couple of kids@ 90lbs ea = 1588lb total plus the outboard and normal bits and bobs maybe another 500lb at least, So as you can see the displacement of the hull has significant extra capacity.
As far as my logic takes me even when full of water the hull will still have significant displacement
If Im barking up the wrong tree here please feel free to correct me as this is one of those things I would love to get my head around just for my own knowledge base




