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Stern

The stern is the back or aft-most part of a ship or boat, technically defined as the area built up over the sternpost, extending upwards from the counter rail to the taffrail. The stern lies opposite the bow, the foremost part of a ship. Originally, the term only referred to the aft port section of the ship, but eventually came to refer to the entire back of a vessel. The stern end of a ship is indicated with a white navigation light at night.

Detailed schematic of an elliptical or "fantail" stern[1]
The flat transom stern of the cargo ship Sichem Princess Marie-Chantal

Sterns on European and American wooden sailing ships began with two principal forms: the square or transom stern and the elliptical, fantail, or merchant stern,[1] and were developed in that order. The hull sections of a sailing ship located before the stern were composed of a series of U-shaped rib-like frames set in a sloped or "cant" arrangement, with the last frame before the stern being called the fashion timber(s) or fashion piece(s), so called for "fashioning" the after part of the ship.[2] This frame is designed to support the various beams that make up the stern.

In 1817 the British naval architect Sir Robert Seppings introduced the concept of the round or circular stern.[3] The square stern had been an easy target for enemy cannon, and could not support the weight of heavy stern chase guns. But Seppings' design left the rudder head exposed, and was regarded by many as simply ugly—no American warships were designed with such sterns, and the round stern was quickly superseded by the elliptical stern. The United States began building the first elliptical stern warship in 1820, a decade before the British.[3] USS Brandywine became the first sailing ship to sport such a stern. Though a great improvement over the transom stern in terms of its vulnerability to attack when under fire, elliptical sterns still had obvious weaknesses which the next major stern development — the iron-hulled cruiser stern — addressed far better and with significantly different materials.

Types Edit

Transom Edit

 
1. Keel (light peach) 2. Skeg (dark purple) 3. Deadwood (olive drab) 4. Stern post (forest green) 5. Filling chock (bright yellow) 6. Filling transoms (pale yellow-green) 7. Wing transom (turquoise) 8. Helm port (orange) 9. Counter timbers (pale violet) 10. Margin (indigo) 11. Horn timber (green) 12. Stern timbers (apricot) 13. Side-counter timbers (pale yellow) 14. Quarter-timbers (red) 15. Fashion timber (fuchsia) 16. Cant frames (blue) 17. Square body frames (uncolored)

In naval architecture, the term transom has two meanings. First, it can be any of the individual beams that run side-to-side or "athwart" the hull at any point abaft the fashion timber; second, it can refer specifically to the flat or slightly curved surface that is the very back panel of a transom stern. In this sense, a transom stern is the product of the use of a series of transoms, and hence the two terms have blended.

The stern of a classical sailing ship housed the captain's quarters and became increasingly large and elaborate between the 15th and 18th centuries, especially in the baroque era, when such wedding-cake-like structures became so heavy that crews sometimes threw the decoration overboard rather than be burdened with its useless weight. Until a new form of stern appeared in the 19th century, the transom stern was a floating house—and required just as many timbers, walls, windows, and frames. The stern frame provided the foundational structure of the transom stern, and was composed of the sternpost, wing transom, and fashion piece.[4]

Abaft the fashion timber, the transom stern was composed of two different kinds of timbers:

  • Transoms – These timbers extend across the low parts of the hull near the rudder, and are secured (notched and/or bolted) to the sternpost. The transom located at the base of the stern, and the uppermost of the main transoms,[5] was typically called the wing transom; the principal transom below this and level with the lower deck was called the deck transom; between these two were a series of filling transoms. If the stern had transoms above the wing transom, they would no longer be affixed to the sternpost. The first of these might be called a counter transom; next up was the window sill transom; above that, the spar deck transom. The larger the vessel, the more numerous and wider the transoms required to support its stern.
  • Stern timbers (also called stern frames) – These timbers are mounted vertically in a series; each timber typically rests or "steps" on the wing transom and then stretches out (aft) and upward. Those not reaching all the way to the taffrail are called short stern timbers, while those that do are called long stern timbers. The two outermost of these timbers, located at the corners of the stern, are called the side-counter timbers or outer stern timbers. It is the stern timbers collectively which determine the backward slope of the square stern, called its rake – that is, if the stern timbers end up producing a final transom that falls vertically to the water, this is considered a transom with no rake; if the stern timbers produce a stern with some degree of slope; such a stern is considered a raked stern.

The flat surface of any transom stern may begin either at or above the waterline of the vessel. The geometric line which stretches from the wing transom to the archboard is called the counter; a large vessel may have two such counters, called a lower counter and a second or upper counter.[5] The lower counter stretches from directly above the wing transom to the lower counter rail, and the upper counter from the lower counter rail to the upper counter rail, immediately under the stern's lowest set of windows (which in naval parlance were called "lights"[6]).

Elliptical Edit

 
Diagram of a circular stern as designed by Sir Robert Seppings[7]

The visual unpopularity of Seppings's circular stern was soon rectified by Sir William Symonds. In this revised stern, a set of straight post timbers (also called "whiskers", "horn timbers", or "fan tail timbers"[8]) stretches from the keel diagonally aft and upward. It rests on the top of the sternpost and runs on either side of the rudder post (thus creating the "helm port" through which the rudder passes) to a point well above the vessel's waterline. Whereas the timbers of the transom stern all heeled on the wing transom, the timbers of the elliptical stern all heel on the whiskers, to which they are affixed at a 45° angle (i.e., "canted") when viewed from overhead and decrease in length as they are installed aft until the curvature is complete. The finished stern has a continuous curved edge around the outside and is raked aft.

 
The counter stern of SS Constitution was shared with her sister ship, SS Independence

Other names for the elliptical stern include a "counter stern", in reference to its very long counter, and a "cutaway stern".[9] The elliptical stern began use during the age of sail, but remained very popular for both merchant and warships well into the nautical age of steam and through the first eight decades of steamship construction (roughly 1840–1920). Despite the design's leaving the rudder exposed and vulnerable in combat situations, many counter-sterned warships survived both World Wars, and stylish high-end vessels sporting them were coming off the ways into the 1950s, including the US-flagged sisters SS Constitution and SS Independence.

Cruiser Edit

As ships of wooden construction gave way to iron and steel, the cruiser stern—another design without transoms and known variously as the canoe stern, parabolic stern, and the double-ended stern—became the next prominent development in ship stern design, particularly in warships of the earlier half of the 20th century.[10] The intent of this re-design was to protect the steering gear by bringing it below the armor deck. The stern now came to a point rather than a flat panel or a gentle curve, and the counter reached from the sternpost all the way to the taffrail in a continuous arch. It was soon discovered that vessels with cruiser sterns experienced less water resistance when under way than those with elliptical sterns, and between World War I and World War II most merchant ship designs soon followed suit.

Others Edit

 
Illustrations of several kinds of stern: Fig. 21 Fantail; Fig. 22 Transom; Fig. 23 "Compromise"; Fig. 24 "V" stern; Fig. 25 Round; Fig. 26 Torpedo; Fig. 27 Canoe[11]

None of these three main types of stern has vanished from the modern naval architectural repertoire, and all three continue to be used in one form or another by designers for many uses. Variations on these basic designs have resulted in an outflow of "new" stern types and names, only some of which are itemized here.

The reverse stern, reverse transom stern, sugar-scoop, or retroussé stern is a kind of transom stern that is raked backwards (common on modern yachts, rare on vessels before the 20th century); the vertical transom stern or plumb stern is raked neither forward nor back, but falls directly from the taffrail down to the wing transom. The rocket ship stern is a term for an extremely angled retroussé stern. A double ended ship with a very narrow square counter formed from the bulwarks or upper deck above the head of the rudder is said to have a pink stern or pinky stern.[4] The torpedo stern or torpedo-boat stern describes a kind of stern with a low rounded shape that is nearly flat at the waterline, but which then slopes upward in a conical fashion towards the deck (practical for small high-speed power boats with very shallow drafts).[12]

A Costanzi stern is a type of stern designed for use on ocean-going vessels. Its hard-chined design is a compromise between the 'spoon-shaped' stern usually found on ocean liners, and the flat transom, often required for fitting azimuth thrusters. The design allows for improved seagoing characteristics. It is the stern design on Queen Mary 2, and was originally proposed for SS Oceanic and Eugenio C, both constructed in the 1960s.[13]

 
The hard-chines of a Costanzi stern on Queen Mary 2

A lute stern is to be found on inshore craft on the Sussex, England, shore. It comprises a watertight transom with the topside planking extended aft to form a non-watertight counter which is boarded across the fashion timbers curving outward aft from the transom. Some working boats and modern replicas have a similar form of counter, built to be water tight as described in the "transom stern" section above. These are being confused with lute sterns but as a lute is not watertight, a better term is needed. Chappelle in American Small Sailing Craft[14] refers to a Bermudan boat with this form of counter, using the term "square tuck stern" to describe it. The term "tuck" is used in the northwest of England for this area of the hull at the sternpost, and for the bulkhead across the counter if one is fitted.

The fantail stern describes a stern that starts at the water and widens as you go upwards. This is famous on many 19th century tea clippers and the ill-fated RMS Titanic.

A bustle stern refers to any kind of stern (transom, elliptical, etc.) that has a large "bustle" or blister at the waterline below the stern to prevent the stern from "squatting" when getting underway.[15] It only appears in sailboats, never in power-driven craft.

Image gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Estep, Harvey Cole (1918). How Wooden Ships Are Built. New York: W. W. Norton. p. 59. OCLC 561361622.
  2. ^ Burney, William (2006) [1815], Falconer's New Universal Dictionary of the Marine, London: Chatham Publishing, p. 457, ISBN 1-86176-204-6
  3. ^ a b Canney, Donald L. (2001), Sailing Warships of the U.S. Navy, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, OCLC 201931743
  4. ^ a b Steel, David (1805), The Shipwright's vade-mecum, London: Navigation-Warehouse, pp. 120, 136, OCLC 34631820, retrieved 23 July 2011
  5. ^ a b Hedderwick, Peter (1830), A Treatise On Marine Architecture, Edinburgh: Published for author, p. 122, OCLC 220933246, retrieved 29 July 2011
  6. ^ Mondfeld, Wolfram zu (2005), Historic Ship Models, New York: Sterling, p. 104, ISBN 1-4027-2186-2
  7. ^ "Sir Robert Seppings". HMS Unicorn. Retrieved 2020-03-16.
  8. ^ Hall, Henry (1884), Report on the Ship-Building Industry of the United States, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, p. 168, OCLC 11633113, retrieved 5 May 2011
  9. ^ "Glossary-"Counter" (or "Cutaway") Sterns". Naval History & Heritage Command. 17 March 2007. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
  10. ^ Schneekluth, Herbert; Bertram, Volker (1998) [1987], Ship Design for Efficiency and Economy (Second ed.), Woburn: Butterworth-Heinemannn, ISBN 0-7506-4133-9, retrieved 23 July 2011
  11. ^ Leitch, Albert Clark (1920). Victor W. Pagé (ed.). Motor Boats and Boat Motors. New York: Norman W. Henley. p. 32. OCLC 314767880.
  12. ^ Whitney, William Dwight (1911), Smith, Benjamin E. (ed.), The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, vol. 9, New York: The Century Company, p. 481, OCLC 1062940, retrieved 1 May 2011
  13. ^ Maxtone-Graham, John (2004). Queen Mary 2: The Greatest Ocean Liner of our Time. Bulfinch Press. p. 21. ISBN 0-8212-2885-4.
  14. ^ Chapelle, Howard Irving (1951). American Small Sailing Craft: Their Design, Development, and Construction. Norton. ISBN 9780393031430.
  15. ^ Chapelle, Howard Irving (1971) [1936], Yacht Design and Planning, New York: WW Norton & Company, pp. 80–81, ISBN 0-393-03756-8


stern, other, uses, disambiguation, stern, back, most, part, ship, boat, technically, defined, area, built, over, sternpost, extending, upwards, from, counter, rail, taffrail, stern, lies, opposite, foremost, part, ship, originally, term, only, referred, port,. For other uses see Stern disambiguation The stern is the back or aft most part of a ship or boat technically defined as the area built up over the sternpost extending upwards from the counter rail to the taffrail The stern lies opposite the bow the foremost part of a ship Originally the term only referred to the aft port section of the ship but eventually came to refer to the entire back of a vessel The stern end of a ship is indicated with a white navigation light at night Detailed schematic of an elliptical or fantail stern 1 The flat transom stern of the cargo ship Sichem Princess Marie ChantalSterns on European and American wooden sailing ships began with two principal forms the square or transom stern and the elliptical fantail or merchant stern 1 and were developed in that order The hull sections of a sailing ship located before the stern were composed of a series of U shaped rib like frames set in a sloped or cant arrangement with the last frame before the stern being called the fashion timber s or fashion piece s so called for fashioning the after part of the ship 2 This frame is designed to support the various beams that make up the stern In 1817 the British naval architect Sir Robert Seppings introduced the concept of the round or circular stern 3 The square stern had been an easy target for enemy cannon and could not support the weight of heavy stern chase guns But Seppings design left the rudder head exposed and was regarded by many as simply ugly no American warships were designed with such sterns and the round stern was quickly superseded by the elliptical stern The United States began building the first elliptical stern warship in 1820 a decade before the British 3 USS Brandywine became the first sailing ship to sport such a stern Though a great improvement over the transom stern in terms of its vulnerability to attack when under fire elliptical sterns still had obvious weaknesses which the next major stern development the iron hulled cruiser stern addressed far better and with significantly different materials Contents 1 Types 1 1 Transom 1 2 Elliptical 1 3 Cruiser 1 4 Others 2 Image gallery 3 ReferencesTypes EditTransom Edit Main article Transom nautical nbsp 1 Keel light peach 2 Skeg dark purple 3 Deadwood olive drab 4 Stern post forest green 5 Filling chock bright yellow 6 Filling transoms pale yellow green 7 Wing transom turquoise 8 Helm port orange 9 Counter timbers pale violet 10 Margin indigo 11 Horn timber green 12 Stern timbers apricot 13 Side counter timbers pale yellow 14 Quarter timbers red 15 Fashion timber fuchsia 16 Cant frames blue 17 Square body frames uncolored In naval architecture the term transom has two meanings First it can be any of the individual beams that run side to side or athwart the hull at any point abaft the fashion timber second it can refer specifically to the flat or slightly curved surface that is the very back panel of a transom stern In this sense a transom stern is the product of the use of a series of transoms and hence the two terms have blended The stern of a classical sailing ship housed the captain s quarters and became increasingly large and elaborate between the 15th and 18th centuries especially in the baroque era when such wedding cake like structures became so heavy that crews sometimes threw the decoration overboard rather than be burdened with its useless weight Until a new form of stern appeared in the 19th century the transom stern was a floating house and required just as many timbers walls windows and frames The stern frame provided the foundational structure of the transom stern and was composed of the sternpost wing transom and fashion piece 4 Abaft the fashion timber the transom stern was composed of two different kinds of timbers Transoms These timbers extend across the low parts of the hull near the rudder and are secured notched and or bolted to the sternpost The transom located at the base of the stern and the uppermost of the main transoms 5 was typically called the wing transom the principal transom below this and level with the lower deck was called the deck transom between these two were a series of filling transoms If the stern had transoms above the wing transom they would no longer be affixed to the sternpost The first of these might be called a counter transom next up was the window sill transom above that the spar deck transom The larger the vessel the more numerous and wider the transoms required to support its stern Stern timbers also called stern frames These timbers are mounted vertically in a series each timber typically rests or steps on the wing transom and then stretches out aft and upward Those not reaching all the way to the taffrail are called short stern timbers while those that do are called long stern timbers The two outermost of these timbers located at the corners of the stern are called the side counter timbers or outer stern timbers It is the stern timbers collectively which determine the backward slope of the square stern called its rake that is if the stern timbers end up producing a final transom that falls vertically to the water this is considered a transom with no rake if the stern timbers produce a stern with some degree of slope such a stern is considered a raked stern The flat surface of any transom stern may begin either at or above the waterline of the vessel The geometric line which stretches from the wing transom to the archboard is called the counter a large vessel may have two such counters called a lower counter and a second or upper counter 5 The lower counter stretches from directly above the wing transom to the lower counter rail and the upper counter from the lower counter rail to the upper counter rail immediately under the stern s lowest set of windows which in naval parlance were called lights 6 Elliptical Edit nbsp Diagram of a circular stern as designed by Sir Robert Seppings 7 The visual unpopularity of Seppings s circular stern was soon rectified by Sir William Symonds In this revised stern a set of straight post timbers also called whiskers horn timbers or fan tail timbers 8 stretches from the keel diagonally aft and upward It rests on the top of the sternpost and runs on either side of the rudder post thus creating the helm port through which the rudder passes to a point well above the vessel s waterline Whereas the timbers of the transom stern all heeled on the wing transom the timbers of the elliptical stern all heel on the whiskers to which they are affixed at a 45 angle i e canted when viewed from overhead and decrease in length as they are installed aft until the curvature is complete The finished stern has a continuous curved edge around the outside and is raked aft nbsp The counter stern of SS Constitution was shared with her sister ship SS IndependenceOther names for the elliptical stern include a counter stern in reference to its very long counter and a cutaway stern 9 The elliptical stern began use during the age of sail but remained very popular for both merchant and warships well into the nautical age of steam and through the first eight decades of steamship construction roughly 1840 1920 Despite the design s leaving the rudder exposed and vulnerable in combat situations many counter sterned warships survived both World Wars and stylish high end vessels sporting them were coming off the ways into the 1950s including the US flagged sisters SS Constitution and SS Independence Cruiser Edit As ships of wooden construction gave way to iron and steel the cruiser stern another design without transoms and known variously as the canoe stern parabolic stern and the double ended stern became the next prominent development in ship stern design particularly in warships of the earlier half of the 20th century 10 The intent of this re design was to protect the steering gear by bringing it below the armor deck The stern now came to a point rather than a flat panel or a gentle curve and the counter reached from the sternpost all the way to the taffrail in a continuous arch It was soon discovered that vessels with cruiser sterns experienced less water resistance when under way than those with elliptical sterns and between World War I and World War II most merchant ship designs soon followed suit Others Edit nbsp Illustrations of several kinds of stern Fig 21 Fantail Fig 22 Transom Fig 23 Compromise Fig 24 V stern Fig 25 Round Fig 26 Torpedo Fig 27 Canoe 11 None of these three main types of stern has vanished from the modern naval architectural repertoire and all three continue to be used in one form or another by designers for many uses Variations on these basic designs have resulted in an outflow of new stern types and names only some of which are itemized here The reverse stern reverse transom stern sugar scoop or retrousse stern is a kind of transom stern that is raked backwards common on modern yachts rare on vessels before the 20th century the vertical transom stern or plumb stern is raked neither forward nor back but falls directly from the taffrail down to the wing transom The rocket ship stern is a term for an extremely angled retrousse stern A double ended ship with a very narrow square counter formed from the bulwarks or upper deck above the head of the rudder is said to have a pink stern or pinky stern 4 The torpedo stern or torpedo boat stern describes a kind of stern with a low rounded shape that is nearly flat at the waterline but which then slopes upward in a conical fashion towards the deck practical for small high speed power boats with very shallow drafts 12 A Costanzi stern is a type of stern designed for use on ocean going vessels Its hard chined design is a compromise between the spoon shaped stern usually found on ocean liners and the flat transom often required for fitting azimuth thrusters The design allows for improved seagoing characteristics It is the stern design on Queen Mary 2 and was originally proposed for SS Oceanic and Eugenio C both constructed in the 1960s 13 nbsp The hard chines of a Costanzi stern on Queen Mary 2A lute stern is to be found on inshore craft on the Sussex England shore It comprises a watertight transom with the topside planking extended aft to form a non watertight counter which is boarded across the fashion timbers curving outward aft from the transom Some working boats and modern replicas have a similar form of counter built to be water tight as described in the transom stern section above These are being confused with lute sterns but as a lute is not watertight a better term is needed Chappelle in American Small Sailing Craft 14 refers to a Bermudan boat with this form of counter using the term square tuck stern to describe it The term tuck is used in the northwest of England for this area of the hull at the sternpost and for the bulkhead across the counter if one is fitted The fantail stern describes a stern that starts at the water and widens as you go upwards This is famous on many 19th century tea clippers and the ill fated RMS Titanic A bustle stern refers to any kind of stern transom elliptical etc that has a large bustle or blister at the waterline below the stern to prevent the stern from squatting when getting underway 15 It only appears in sailboats never in power driven craft Further information on the triangular stern component regionally named as Ice nose or Ice cutter Ice hornImage gallery Edit nbsp The transom of Soleil Royal by Jean Berain the Elder nbsp The stern of the Dutch East India Company ship Amsterdam transom stern nbsp The stern of a modern sailboat Tirion28 nbsp The stern of a UK Severn class lifeboat nbsp The tall ship Christian Radich showing her elliptical stern nbsp The elliptical stern of the metal hulled Empire SandyReferences Edit a b Estep Harvey Cole 1918 How Wooden Ships Are Built New York W W Norton p 59 OCLC 561361622 Burney William 2006 1815 Falconer s New Universal Dictionary of the Marine London Chatham Publishing p 457 ISBN 1 86176 204 6 a b Canney Donald L 2001 Sailing Warships of the U S Navy Annapolis Naval Institute Press OCLC 201931743 a b Steel David 1805 The Shipwright s vade mecum London Navigation Warehouse pp 120 136 OCLC 34631820 retrieved 23 July 2011 a b Hedderwick Peter 1830 A Treatise On Marine Architecture Edinburgh Published for author p 122 OCLC 220933246 retrieved 29 July 2011 Mondfeld Wolfram zu 2005 Historic Ship Models New York Sterling p 104 ISBN 1 4027 2186 2 Sir Robert Seppings HMS Unicorn Retrieved 2020 03 16 Hall Henry 1884 Report on the Ship Building Industry of the United States Washington D C Government Printing Office p 168 OCLC 11633113 retrieved 5 May 2011 Glossary Counter or Cutaway Sterns Naval History amp Heritage Command 17 March 2007 Retrieved 24 July 2011 Schneekluth Herbert Bertram Volker 1998 1987 Ship Design for Efficiency and Economy Second ed Woburn Butterworth Heinemannn ISBN 0 7506 4133 9 retrieved 23 July 2011 Leitch Albert Clark 1920 Victor W Page ed Motor Boats and Boat Motors New York Norman W Henley p 32 OCLC 314767880 Whitney William Dwight 1911 Smith Benjamin E ed The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia vol 9 New York The Century Company p 481 OCLC 1062940 retrieved 1 May 2011 Maxtone Graham John 2004 Queen Mary 2 The Greatest Ocean Liner of our Time Bulfinch Press p 21 ISBN 0 8212 2885 4 Chapelle Howard Irving 1951 American Small Sailing Craft Their Design Development and Construction Norton ISBN 9780393031430 Chapelle Howard Irving 1971 1936 Yacht Design and Planning New York WW Norton amp Company pp 80 81 ISBN 0 393 03756 8 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sterns Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stern amp oldid 1168278284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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