ceiling - A hull's inner lining. celestial navigation - The use of heavenly bodies for the determination of a vessel's position.
ceiling The inside planking or plating in the hold of a merchant vessel, laid across the floors and carried up the sides of the holds to the level of the beams. (back) centerboard ...
CEILING A term applied to the planking with which the inside of a vessel is sheathed. Also applied to the sheet metal or wood sheathing in quarters and storerooms.
boat catboat A sailboat with a single fore-and-aft sail cathead Timbers projecting from the bow used to secure an anchor catspaw A light wind ruffling the water caught in the stays or misses the stays Same as in irons ceilings ...
Deckhead The underside of the deck, viewed from below (the ceiling.) Depth sounder An instrument that uses sound waves to measure the distance to the seafloor. Displacement speed Also hull speed.
Deckhead - The underside of the deck, viewed from below the ceiling. Declination - The angular distance North or South of the equator, measured from the center of the earth. It thus corresponds to latitude on the earths surface.
This paneling, like that lining the bottom and sides of the holds, is the ceiling. Derrick - A lifting device composed of one mast or pole and a boom or jib which is hinged freely at the bottom.
What landsmen call the ceiling. To really throw you off, the "ceiling" in a ship is the planks on the inside of the hull. Deck Trap Same as deck fence.
The underside of the deck, viewed from below (the ceiling.) Depth Sounder An instrument that uses sound waves to measure the distance to the bottom.
From the padded ceiling sections, to the carved door frames, to halogen lighting throughout to the elegant drape on the portlights and roller shades on the hatches, Beneteau has provided the accents to create a fine yacht.
Two pieces of 1/2-inch oak plank, 10 feet long and 14 inches wide. These for the outside sheathing. For the inside ceiling, two pieces of 1-inch pine, 10 feet long and 16 inches wide. Fore end of cabin ...
Caution should still be used as CNG can collect near the cabin ceiling, potentially causing an explosion. Propane is available in more areas around the world than CNG so CNG is not often used outside of North America.
TRUNNEL - A round or multi-sided piece of hardwood, driven through planks and timbers to connect them. Treenails were employed most frequently in attaching planking to frames, attaching knees to ceiling or beams, and in the scarfing of timbers..
heading or the line of her keel ON THE BOW a direction of forty-five degrees or less from the bow ON THE QUARTER a direction of forty-five degrees or less from the stern OVERBOARD over the side of a vessel OVERHEAD nautical equivalent of ceiling ...
See also: Point, Light, Compass, Right, Top
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