Ha Ha! “Clear cut” That is funny right there! If I do decide to wander up the inside straight I will be hauling oil as fuel, not wood, and that kind of trip will be made a long time from now. I need to get her in the water and iron out the bugs before I go playing Christopher Columbus!
Hello Fred! Yeah I was mostly day dreaming about things I still don’t quite have a handle on. And she will have a schooner stem and counter stern. I like the look better than the straight up stem.
I got an email response from Paul at Selway-Fisher. The hull speed for the Edwardian in the configuration I like is around 7.5 knots. Which obviously means cruising at more like 5 knots just as Mike said. I can live with that; I am building this Launch to wander and tinker, not commute.
Ok… so I got some questions for ya Mike. If it is still raining I don’t mind the extra info! Hehe…
You use wood in your boiler so I am thinking you have a pretty good idea of the amount you use on various trips. The boiler I am going to use is the same configuration as Rainer’s because I will be using mostly wood sometimes coal and experimenting with used engine oil.
The reason is I can get hold of all the used oil I can haul away as well as tons of pallets. Pallets are dry as a bone and cut already, so when taken apart they stack very tight. Taking that information into account can ya give me an idea of how much wood you usually carry? Say in a box that is 3’ x 3’ x 3’ and packed. Two boxes that size? Three, four? I am doodling my hull layout and want to get a better idea of the space I need to set aside for fuel.
As for the oil, I have already done burner experiments with used oil in my wood stove in the shop to have a good working knowledge of how to get a very hot burn with no drips or smoke. I will have to figure out how to hook the equipment to the steam engine but I am thinking that will be the easy part.
So Fred on to the eccentrics. I am thinking the reason for two eccentrics is so that either direction the engine turns will have the valves in optimum timing. If the eccentric were say straight up the engine could run both ways provided you have a method of reversing the timing event. But having only one eccentric would make either direction doable although neither would be timed properly. So if it has only one eccentric it is timed to run in one direction optimally although it can still go backwards but not very well. Am I close?

Cheers,
Scott