| Wilbur the Wisp
 Low Impact Coastal Power Cruiser
 Container Transportable Design by Jeff 
                Gilbert
 
                 
                  | Note: Jeff Gilbert, designer 
                      of Hot Chili , entered a 
                      design contest at conceptboat.com 
                      He did not win, but has allowed us to view his entry |  
                 
                  | LOA | 11.89 | Disp. | 2880 |   
                  | LWL | 11.51 | Disp./WLL | 53 |   
                  | Beam | 2.22 | Honda OB - | 50hp - 15kts |   
                  | Beam WL | 2.18 | -  | 130hp - 25kts |   
                  | Draft | 0.40 |  - | 225hp - 33kts |   
                  | Headroom | 1.90 | Diesel OB - | 36hp - 13kts |  DESIGN BACKGROUND 
                The dream of voyaging overseas rarely includes a long slog across 
                a moody ocean to get there. Furthermore optimum watercraft for 
                overseas coastlines differ vastly from those required to safely 
                get there. Long range motorboats are neither nimble nor beachable, 
                blue-water sailcraft have deep draught & multis are clumsy 
                & expensive to berth. The possibility of arriving exhausted, 
                in an unsuitable boat needing unavailable parts, keeps would-be-Voyagers 
                home in droves. Besides, few with the money have the time to cross 
                oceans.
 SOLUTIONWilbur covers the hard miles on a container ship, arriving in 
                pristine coasting condition. Wilbur is a “Low Impact Cruiser” 
                –a holiday home moving swiftly & quietly, without a 
                huge displacement wave disrupting those same sensitive land-water 
                interface environments which afford the most beautiful of views.
 
 Wilbur can be craned from the water to a flat surface, and then 
                pushed/winched into a standard 40ft container on 3 steel protected 
                keel points. Only preparation is lowering the windscreen & 
                radar mast, & raising the engine.
 
 Wilbur fits a road/rail flatbed, & is legally trailerable. 
                Holidaymakers can freight the boat ahead to a suitable launching 
                facility. Return trips may be eliminated, time pressures eased 
                Plan changes need not entail abandoning the boat overseas.
 COSTSCONTAINER SHIPPING COSTS LESS THAN STEAMING FUEL.
 Even short hauls are < $US1 per mile, San Francisco or UK to 
                Indonesia is under $US3000, and the longest trips on the planet 
                are $US5000. Insurance is negotiable & optional, & compared 
                with steaming risks, probably unnecessary.
 
 For the commercial builder, export costs become a viable fraction 
                of product value.
 SIMPLE LIVING SYSTEMSPlans show a minimal fitout for a small group to cruise in uncluttered 
                comfort. Twelve-volt electrics are: safety, deck & interior 
                lighting, CD & radio, sounder, radar, GPS, anchor winch, bilge 
                pump & a small fridge when an icebox can’t cope. Deep-cycle 
                gel batteries charge by motor generator, shore power & solar 
                panels. Salt & fresh water are manually pumped. Both bilge 
                pump and anchor winch are backed by manual equivalents. Cooking 
                is by 2-burner gas stove. Shower hand-pumps from a bucket of hot 
                water. A composting toilet eliminates through–hull fittings. 
                Engine air cooling ducts run along cabin sides sucking toilet 
                (port) & cabin (starboard) air as they bypass sealable vents. 
                Stale air is expelled into the engine box, along with grey water.
 
 This comfortable “upgraded camping” level makes fine 
                ecological & economic sense, but is not for everyone! A luxury 
                fitout will up displacement, but if weight is kept low the only 
                apparent effect is 55mm/tonne extra immersion at rest.
  click to enlarge
 HULL FORMA hard chine at WLL provides form stability for the narrow moderate-Vee 
                warped-bottom planing hull. Bottom sections are concave with the 
                deadrise of the planing section dropping over 25ft from 23degrees 
                to just an inch at the stern. The high WL Length:Beam ratio, shallow-Vee 
                & low displacement produce a non-aggressive hull form which 
                slips across & through the water with little fuss or fuel. 
                Such designs are gaining recognition (mainly via the booming Power 
                Cat industry) as a third hull form, unlike the limited speed displacement 
                type or the power-hungry larger deep-Vee planing hull. Wilbur’s 
                “Displaning” or ”Cutwater” hull type increases 
                speed smoothly with power, sans “planing hump”. At 
                low speeds her fine entry slices her along, shifting very little 
                water a very small distance for passage. Stability range, accurately 
                modelled by computer, is 105 degrees with half tankage.
 POWERING & AUXILIARY 
                The outboard-in-a-well prevailed over a more economic Inboard 
                diesel to provide easy servicing anywhere. More importantly the 
                mounting plate can be hand cranked in guide slots to clear the 
                prop for beaching & passage transport. This allows headroom 
                despite having to pass a 2.29m2 container door. Positioning forrd 
                beside the outside helm eliminates cavitation. The well’s 
                soundproofed cover is both table & workbench.
 
 The 225HP Honda 4-stroke rockets the narrow hull to 33knots, while 
                the slower 130HP version gives 5nm/gallon. A Yanmar 36HP Diesel 
                outboard returns over 10nmpg @ 8.5 kts. Motor steering is adequate 
                but improvable by low-profile rudders hung from the twin tracking 
                keels. The high-load NZ-designed tender handles rugged conditions 
                and its motor will push the main hull in a breakdown.
 
 STYLING & MATERIALS
 Form is dictated by the container’s low cross-sectional 
                area, combined with the need for work-area headroom. Conventional 
                styling looks like a lowered scale model under this constraint, 
                & was rejected in favour of a curvaceous semi-automotive form, 
                with rounded sheer & cabin sections lowering windage. In a 
                seaway Wilbur sheds water easily, but nevertheless the cabin door 
                is watertight.
 
 The E-glass or sheathed cedar strip hull comes in under a tonne. 
                Major bulkheads are foam composite. Interior finish is cream offset 
                with hardwood trim and stained/epoxied ply furniture. Windows 
                are tinted perspex on Sikaflex, Awlgrip decks sheathed end-grain 
                balsa.
 
 ACCOMODATIONS
 Wet areas
 The Radar mast (essential for night, fog, traffic & harbour 
                entrance) folds forrd; braced upright it provides a handgrips 
                for the sole foredeck access via ladder. The foredeck is precarious 
                in a seaway, & side-decks virtually non-existent to gain cabin 
                width.
 
 The cockpit is 610mm AWL affording 360deg.visibility. The transom 
                folds down forming a swim platform & opening the RIB garage. 
                Two steps down is the wet (heads & shower) cabin area, & 
                a watertight bulkhead leads to the
 Utility/Saloon area
 Galley, raised lounge area, inside helm. Ventilation by rear lifting 
                clear hatch over helm. Table and seats may convert to Guest double 
                berth.
 Below decks
 Chartroom/office/stateroom. Foredeck ladder/hatch , opening ports, 
                2 Dorade vents. Under-table quarter berth extends beneath helm.
 CONCLUSIONThis concept opens overseas coasting to a sector without the time, 
                inclination, or substantial boat for ocean-crossing. It offers 
                a viable worldwide delivery system for builders, and could provide 
                chartering from a Client’s port of choice.
 
 Wilbur is attractive, environment and fuel-responsible, fast, 
                ergonomic, uncluttered and infinitely useable. It can provide 
                a millionaire’s holiday to the far less moneyed.
 Click 
                here for Key and illustration  
 
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