When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: swivel bar stool replacement seat covers for boats for sale craigslist
    • Amazon Home

      Shop New Trends & Arrivals.

      Discover Your Style with Amazon!

    • Amazon Deals

      Shop our Deal of the Day, Lightning

      Deals & more limited-time offers.

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lido 14 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lido_14

    The Lido 14 evolved from the earlier Lehman 14 via a rather complete redesign including sheer, seats, foredeck, and sail plan. The cockpit length allows for six adults on full-length seats. The seats, with a bow compartment, provide flotation. Only limited modifications are allowed for racing, as the intention is to keep Lido a simple, limited ...

  3. Bar stool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_stool

    Bar stools are often made of wood or metal. There are bar stools with and without armrests, backs, and padding or upholstery on the seat surface. Bar stools can range from basic wooden designs to more complex ones with adjustable height. Extra tall and extra short are common features, as well as indoor bar stools and outdoor bar stools. Some ...

  4. Human-powered watercraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-powered_watercraft

    Row boat; Rowing a trainera. 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 ...

  5. Poop deck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poop_deck

    Poop deck of a model of the Soleil-Royal, as seen from the forecastle. In naval architecture, a poop deck is a deck that forms the roof of a cabin built in the rear, or "aft", part of the superstructure of a ship.

  6. Ballast tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballast_tank

    Cross section of a vessel with a single ballast tank at the bottom. A ballast tank is a compartment within a boat, ship or other floating structure that holds water, which is used as ballast to provide hydrostatic stability for a vessel, to reduce or control buoyancy, as in a submarine, to correct trim or list, to provide a more even load distribution along the hull to reduce structural ...

  7. Stabilizer (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stabilizer_(ship)

    Diagram of retractable fin stabilizers on a ship. Ship stabilizers: a fixed fin stabilizer (foreground centre) and bilge keels (left background).. Ship stabilizers (or stabilisers) are fins or rotors mounted beneath the waterline and emerging laterally from the hull to reduce a ship's roll due to wind or waves.