• Sabre363
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    461 month ago

    Types of fixed keels: Retractable

        • @mark3748
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          61 month ago

          Yes, a daggerboard. It’s like a centerboard keel, but slides through a slot instead of swinging up into the hull.

        • moonlight
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          11 month ago

          I don’t think so. A daggerboard or centerboard has a similar purpose, but by definition is not a keel.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 month ago

      “Fixed” refers to the fact that the keel isn’t removable. It’s either part of the boat’s hull, or it’s bolted on and can’t be removed without dry-docking the boat.

      There are some boat designs with removable keels. For instance, many small sailboats (called a dinghy) have removable keels, so you can remove the keel and beach them easily. The downside to having a removable keel on a sailboat is that it makes the boat prone to capsizing in strong winds; A fixed keel can have a built in ballast to keep the boat from tipping. But on a dinghy, you need to use a live ballast (literally your own body weight leaning out of the boat) to counteract the wind’s effects.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        Isn’t a non weighted and removable „keel” on small sailing dinghies called a „dagger board” and is there only for mitigating drift?

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        11 month ago

        That’s some fun stuff though, especially on a catamaran when one of the two hulls is entirely is up in the air.