Pro-Line Boats 33 Express Owner's Manual page 46

Table of Contents

Advertisement

Inland Rules
Intracoastal
Waterways
Jetty
Keel
Knot
Launch
(2) A small open powerboat mainly used for transportation between a
Lee
Leeward
Leeway
Limber Holes
List
LOA
Locker
Log
Lubber's line
Rules of the road that apply to vessel operation in harbors and certain rivers,
lakes and inland waterways.
(ICWs) Bays, rivers and canals along the coasts (such as Atlantic and Gulf
of Mexico coasts). They are connected so that vessels may travel without
going into the open sea.
A structure, usually masonry, that is projecting out from the shore. A jetty
may protect a harbor entrance.
The permanently positioned fore and aft backbone member of a boat's hull.
To bend a line. A unit of speed equal to one nautical MPH (6076.1 feet).
(1) To put a vessel into the water.
vessel and the shore.
The side opposite to that from which the wind blows.
Situated on the side turned away from the wind. Opposite of windward.
The amount a boat is carried sideways by the wind's force or current.
Drainage holes in the bilge timbers of a vessel allowing water to run to a low
point in the bilge for pumping out.
(1) Continuous leaning to one side often caused by an imbalance in
Stowage or a leak into one compartment
(2) A light list is a printed listing of aids to navigation in geographical
order or inclining of a vessel toward the side.
The length overall.
projecting spars or rudder.
A storage place or a closet.
A record or diary of a vessel's journey.
A mark or permanent line on a compass that shows the course of the boat.
The maximum length of a vessel's hull excluding
46

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents