Fast Powerboat Seamanship: The Complete Guide to Boat Handling, Navigation, and Safety

Front Cover
McGraw Hill Professional, Jul 16, 2004 - Sports & Recreation - 272 pages

In Fast Powerboat Seamanship, one of the world’s leading authorities on high-speed piloting and navigation shows you how to operate any fast boat for maximum thrill at minimum risk. Dag Pike describes the effects of hull design on performance and gives you a better understanding of how your boat is built. He explains how fast boats respond under a variety of conditions, and he walks you through everything you need to know about engines, propulsion systems, trim tabs, and the other controls that give you complete command of your craft. Pike provides a step-by-step tutorial in the techniques of fast-boat driving and spells out the measures you can take to ensure comfort and safety for yourself and your passengers. He also explores the things you need to know about the sea itself: how waves are generated, how they move, and how to assess and adjust to changing conditions on the water. You’ll learn how to adapt to the faster pace of events at 25 to 100 knots; navigate at high speed; and control a high-speed turn. You’ll also learn techniques for avoiding collisions, operating in extreme weather, and much more.

The better you understand your boat and how to control it, the greater the pleasure you will get from high-performance boating. Fast Powerboat Seamanship is the source for the specialized knowledge and skills you need to get the most out of any fast boat.

From inside the book

Contents

Chapter
5
The Technical Side of Fast Boats
29
Chapter 2
39
Copyright

10 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2004)

Roderick Douglas "Dag" Pike is a fellow and ex-member of Council of the Royal Institute of Navigation, a fellow of the Royal Geographic Society, and a member of Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers (USA). He has extensive boating experience - particularly with high speed craft, including gas turbine boats that typically reach speeds of 130 mph. In 1986 he was the navigator of a successful transatlantic speed record attempt by Virgin Atlantic Challenger II. Dag has won numerous prestigious events and has more than 25 years of offshore powerboat racing at the highest levels. HOMETOWN: UK

Bibliographic information