A ragged bottom hull boat features a hull design with a flat or slightly curved bottom that often has a rugged or uneven appearance. This type of hull is typically used for stability in shallow waters and is ideal for activities like fishing or navigating marshy areas. The design allows for better maneuverability and can improve performance in certain conditions, making it suitable for various recreational and work-related purposes.
No, a ragged-bottom hull typically refers to a hull shape that has uneven or irregular surfaces, which can affect the boat's performance in the water. Planing hulls, on the other hand, are designed to lift out of the water at higher speeds, reducing drag and increasing efficiency.
That is a boat hull that does not have a keel beam or a defined chine.
The bottom of a car
Hull Is The Inside or bottom(?), and deck is the top. other than that i thinks its just called a boat. My best answer would be hull.
The Hull is considered the bottom of a boat, comes in several different forms.
The best plaining boat is one that has a flat bottom. A good plaining boat is a Boston Whaler
Draft.
The hull on a boat is the body of it. It is watertight so that no water leaks in and sinks the boat.
The bottom of the boat is called the keel. Attached to and atop that is the hull, part of which is below the waterline, part above. Unless you're talking about a little ol' flat bottomed dinghy -- then the bottom is just called the bottom.
The term for the depth of the water needed to float a boat clear on the bottom is called "draft." It is the distance between the waterline and the bottom of the boat's hull. The draft of a boat is important to know to avoid running aground in shallow waters.
On the hull
That would be its keel.