A bulb keel is a keel, usually made with a high aspect ratio foil, that contains a ballast filled, usually teardrop shaped bulb at the bottom. The purpose of the bulb keel is to place the ballast as low as possible, therefore gaining the maximum possible amount of leverage and thus the most righting moment. A racing class using a bulb keel is the International 110 class, which uses a 300 lb. (136 kg) cast iron bulb keel on a boat whose minimum racing weight is 910 lbs. (414 kg). A keel is a large beam around which the hull of a ship is built. ... FOIL was the name for two different programming languages. ... Leverage is related to torque; leverage is a factor by which lever multiplies a force. ... Moment refers to either of two related concepts in mathematics and physics: Moment (physics) Moment (mathematics) See also Moment (magazine), a Jewish general publication. ...
Since bulb keels work best on long, thin keels or centerboards, they are generally not used on sailboats intended for shallow waters, but are most often found on offshore racing craft. Centerboards built like bulb keels are often referred to as "lifting keels", and they can be retracted into the boat to reduce the draft, and to allow the boat to be loaded onto a trailer. Lifting keels are also more likely to be found on craft built for speed, as a winch or a set of pulleys is required to provide purchase to lift the heavy keel. A centreboard is a form of removable keel on a small sailing boat or dinghy which can be removed to lower the draught (or depth) of the vessel. ... Traditional wooden cutter beating. ... A winch is a machine that is used to wind up a rope. ... A pulley is a wheel with a groove along its edge, for holding a rope or cable. ...
Some boats with lifting keels go so far as to allow the keel to be canted side to side, allowing the bulb to be placed to windward to reduce heel in high winds. Windward is the side of a boat into which the wind is blowing. ...
This is a medium sized genus with 55 species from Mexico to Brazil and Bolivia most often between the elevwtions of sealevel to 800 meters with psuedobulbs or not and an apical leaf having one or two foliaceous sheathes that surround the bottom of the bulb.
The lip has a claw at the base and a triangular blade and may or may not have a callus that isa keel down the mid-lineof the claw and extending out onto the blade.
It has a terete column with a dorsal anther and a stigma at the apex which is a longitudinal slit.