A Treatise on the Stability of Ships (Cambridge Library Collection - Naval and Military History)

by Edward James Reed

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Sir Edward James Reed (1830-1906) was appointed chief constructor of the Navy in 1863, and later founded his own ship design consultancy. He pioneered the methodical use of scientific calculations to determine a ship's weight, strength and stability, and was responsible for a number of revolutionary designs at a crucial period, when ships began to be armoured or rebuilt in iron in response to more powerful weaponry. This book, first published in 1885, sets out his approach to the problem of ensuring stability in iron-built ships. Reed discusses scientific theories of flotation, buoyancy and stability and applies them to contemporary ship design and shipbuilding techniques. Reed also describes the experiments of French naval architects in this area, providing the first English translations of their research. It is an important record of the Victorian naval and scientific understanding of iron-built ship stability, corrective design and building methods.
  • ISBN10 0342014013
  • ISBN13 9780342014019
  • Publish Date 10 October 2018 (first published 22 February 2010)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Imprint Franklin Classics
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 416
  • Language English