Other boats have their positive buoyancy added on, or they have a combination of built-in and added flotation. For example, a Potter 15 sailboat has three parts. The easiest-to-see pieces, assuming they’re still there, are two large blocks of styrofoam located underneath the cockpit seats. Each of these blocks provides three cubic feet or about 190 pounds of flotation (that is, 3 cu-ftx 62 pounds per cubic foot for freshwater, or 64 for seawater). Since the empty weight of a Potter is around 500 pounds, the foam blocks alone are not quite enough to keep the boat afloat if it floods.
The rest is harder to find because it’s underneath the cabin floor. The space forward of the mast support post is filled with foam flotation. If the foam is the older, “open-cell” type, it can slowly absorb water. Unfortunately, without removing the floor or cutting an inspection port, there is no way to inspect it. Fortunately, that area on a Potter is not sealed and any water that gets into the boat can drain back to the cabin, where you can get at it. I estimate the volume of the under-floor foam is 4 to 6 cubic feet, adding another 300 or so pounds of flotation. Combine that with what’s in the stern and you’ve got more than enough —700 pounds of positive buoyancy—to keep the boat from heading to the bottom, even if it’s completely flooded and loaded with gear. There are photos showing a young woman standing in a scuttled Potter full of holes drilled through the hull. I noticed that there were no waves —it’s nice calm water for that particular demonstration. Not quite the same kind of conditions we experience out sailing...
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