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Above: sweep-oar rowing a coxed pair Below: amphibious bicycle 'Cyclomer', Paris, 1932
Human-powered watercraft are watercraft propelled only by human power, instead of being propelled by wind power (via one or more sails ) or an engine .
The three main methods of exerting human power are:
directly from the hands or feet, sometimes aided by swimfins;
through hand-operated oars , paddles , or poles , or;
through the feet with pedals , crankset or treadle .[1]
While most human-powered watercraft use buoyancy to maintain their position relative to the surface of the water, a few, such as human-powered hydrofoils and human-powered submarines , use hydrofoils , either alone or in addition to buoyancy.
Oared craft
Main page: Engineering:Rowing
Oars are held at one end, have a blade on the other end, and pivot in between in oarlocks.
Oared craft include:
Using oars in pairs, with one hand on each oar, is two-oar sculling. The oars may also be called sculls.[2]
Two-oared sculled craft include:
Using oars individually, with both hands on a single oar, is sweep or sweep-oar rowing.[2] In this case the rowers are usually paired so that there is an oar on each side of the boat.
Sweep-oared craft include:
Coxless pair, Coxed pair, Coxless four, Coxed four, and Eight
Galley , Dromon, Trainera, and Trireme
Moving a single stern-mounted oar from side to side, while changing the angle of the blade so as to generate forward thrust on both strokes, is single-oar sculling.[4]
Single-oar sculled craft include:
Paddlecraft
A canoe (upper) and a kayak (lower)
Paddled watercraft, or paddlecraft, uses one or more handheld paddles , each with a widened blade on one or both ends, to push water and propel the watercraft.. Commonly seen paddlecrafts include:
Canoe, Outrigger canoe , Hasamibako bune,[5] [6] [7] Umiak , Waka , Pirogue , Shikara , Dragon boat , and Dugout
Kayak, Sea kayak, Flyak, and Baidarka
Coracle , Tarai-bune
Paddleboard
Pedaled craft
Pedals are attached to a crank and propelled in circles, or to a treadle and reciprocated ,[citation needed ] with the feet. The collected power is then transferred to the water with a paddle wheel , flippers ,[8] [9] [10] or to the air or water with a propeller .
Pedaled craft include:
Poled craft
A pole is held with both hands and used to push against the bottom.
Poled craft include:
Other types
Hand-operated cable ferry
Other types of human-powered watercraft include:
Float tube
Hand-cranked submarine (disambiguation)
Hand-operated cable ferry
Bodyboarding
Gallery
Decavitator, the world's fastest human-powered watercraft, is a pedal-powered hydrofoil
Starting an AquaSkipper hydrofoil
Woman rowing sampan with her feet in Ninh Bình Province of northern Vietnam
race in a wooden sow trough (ge: Sautrogrennen) in Bavaria, Germany (2012)
See also
References
↑ Wilson, David Gordon et al . (May 2020). Bicycling Science (4th paperback ed.). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. https://www.worldcat.org/title/bicycling-science/ .
↑ 2.0 2.1 "Sweep vs. Sculling" . Virginia Boat Club. http://www.virginiaboatclub.org/index.php/component/content/article/78/78 .
↑ Matthew Pike (January 30, 2018). "How Vietnamese Guides Row With Their Feet" . TheCulturalTrip.com. https://theculturetrip.com/asia/vietnam/articles/vietnamese-guides-row-feet/ . "They row with their feet. As Mrs. Gấm puts it: “Rowing boat by feet is much quicker and less exhausting than by hands.”"
↑ Joseph Needham, Colin A. Ronan (1978). The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521315609 . https://books.google.com/books?id=PbnB8gR1gUIC&q=yuloh+history&pg=PA206 . Retrieved 2011-07-27 .
↑ Cummins, Anthony (3 October 2013). The Book of Ninja: The Bansenshukai - Japan's Premier Ninja Manual . Watkins Media Limited. ISBN 9781780286310 . https://books.google.com/books?id=0W_SAQAAQBAJ&dq=Hasamibako+bune&pg=PT375 .
↑ "John ' Lofty' Wiseman SAS Survival Handbook the Ultimate Guide to Surviving Anywhere William Morrow ( 2014)" . May 2014. https://archive.org/stream/JohnLoftyWisemanSASSurvivalHandbookTheUltimateGuideToSurvivingAnywhereWilliamMorrow2014/ebooks/Antony%20Cummins%2C%20Yoshie%20Minami-The%20Book%20of%20Ninja_%20The%20Bansenshukai%20-%20Japan%27s%20Premier%20Ninja%20Manual-Watkins%20Publishing%20%282013%29_djvu.txt .
↑ "Water Tools · 木隠" . 27 November 2023. https://www.kogakure.de/en/water-tools/ .
↑ 8.0 8.1 Mike Hanlon (June 4, 2004). "Hobie Pedal Kayak" . GizMag. http://www.gizmag.com/go/1412/ . "The sturdily constructed pedal/flipper mechanism operates like a penguin's fins - swinging laterally underneath the hull as you pedal."
↑ 9.0 9.1 T. Edward Nickens (Mar 8, 2010). "How to Catch Big Game Fish—From a Kayak" . Popular Mechanics . http://www.popularmechanics.com/adventure/outdoors/a5107/4348531/ . Retrieved 2015-10-22 . "It's outfitted with the MirageDrive propulsion system, a pedal-powered pair of flexible fins that function as oscillating foils—much like penguin and sea-turtle flippers.".
↑ 10.0 10.1 "Pedal-powered paddles a relaxing way to explore" . The Daily Telegraph . Oct 30, 2008. http://www.couriermail.com.au/travel/australia/paddle-power-has-its-place/story-e6freqwx-1111117902533 . "Instead of a conventional paddle, these kayaks can be powered by a foot-pedal system which drives two under-keel fins. Inspired by penguin flippers, the fins swing side to side."
↑ Charlie Sorrel (Oct 19, 2010). "Pedal Powered Submarine Dives to 20-Feet" . Wired . https://www.wired.com/2010/10/pedal-powered-submarine-dives-to-20-feet/ . Retrieved 2015-10-22 . "The Scubster is an underwater bike, a pedal powered submarine with twin propellors [sic] that push it through the water at a speedy 5mph.".
↑ Timon Singh (Aug 25, 2010). "French Engineers Design a Pedal-Powered Submarine" . Inhabitat. http://inhabitat.com/french-engineers-design-a-pedal-powered-submarine/ . "First there was the bicycle, then the pedalo boat, then the pedal-powered aircraft — and now, thanks to a team of French engineers, the world has the pedal-powered submarine."
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-powered watercraft. Read more