Page 1390 |
William Falconer's Dictionary of the Marine |
|||
Table of Contents
T TABLING to TAIL TAIL-BLOCK to TENDING TENON to TIDE TIER to TOGGEL TOMPION to TOPPING TOPPING-LIFT to TRACT-SCOUT TRACTING to TREE-NAILS TRACTING TRADE-WINDS TRAIN TRANSOMS TRANSPORT TRANSPORTING TRAVELER TRAVERSE TRAVERSE-BOARD TREE-NAILS TRESTLE-TREES to TRIP TRIPPING to TRYING TUCK to TYE Search Contact us |
TRANSOMSTRANSOMS, (barres d'arcasse, Fr. transenna, Lat.) certain beams or timbers extended across the stern-post of a ship, to fortify her after-part and give it the figure most suitable to the service for which she is calculated.Transoms are here defined as beams or timbers, because they partake equally of the form and purpose of those pieces. Thus the deck-transom is the aft most or hindmost beam of the lower deck, whereon all the deck-planks are rabbeted: and all the transoms are fixed athwart the stern-post, in the same manner as the floor-timbers are laid upon the keel. As the floor-timbers also, with regard to their general form and arrangement, have a rising, by which the bottom becomes narrower as it ascends towards the extremities; so the arms of the transoms, being gradually closer in proportion to their distance from the wing-transom downwards, give a similar figure to that part of the ship, which accordingly becomes extremely narrow, from the counter towards the keel; and this general figure or curve is called the flight of the transoms. Although these pieces are therefore extremely different in their figures, according to the extent of the angles formed by their branches or horns, each of them has nevertheless a double curve, which is partly vertical, and partly horizontal, with regard to its situation in the ship. The former of these is called, by the artificers, the round-up, and the latter the round-aft. As the transoms fill up the whole space comprehended between the head of the stern-post above, and the aftmost floor-timbers below, it is necessary to distinguish them by particular names. Thus the highest is called the wing-transom the next, the deck-transom; and afterwards follow the first, second, and third transoms; together with the intermediate ones, as represented in fig. I. plate X. and described in the explanation thereof. The vertical direction of the arms or angles of the transoms, with regard to the ship's length, are expressed in the plane of ELEVATION; and their horizontal curves are also delineated on the plane of PROJECTION; both of which are represented under those terms in plate I. and described in the general explanation of the planes in the article Naval ARCHITECTURE. The highest transoms are connected to the ship's quarter by knees, which are bolted to those pieces, and to the after-timbers. See the article SLEEPERS.
© Derived from Thomas Cadell's new corrected edition, London: 1780, page 296, 2003 Prepared by Paul Turnbull http://southseas.nla.gov.au/refs/falc/1390.html |