🚤 Case Study: Designing a 15m Patrol Boat

📅 February 14, 2026⏱️ 12 min read👤 Naval Architecture AI
← Back to Boat Designer Tool

Project Overview

This case study documents the complete design process of a 15-meter high-speed patrol boat for coastal surveillance and interception duties. The project demonstrates real-world application of naval architecture principles, from initial requirements through final specifications.

🎯 Project Objectives:

1. Requirements Analysis

1.1 Operational Requirements

Parameter Requirement Justification
Length Overall 15m ± 0.5m Trailerable, marina constraints
Maximum Speed ≥ 35 knots Interception capability
Cruising Speed 25 knots Fuel efficiency balance
Range 400 nm @ 25 kn Extended patrol endurance
Crew 6 persons Standard patrol team
Seakeeping Sea State 4 Coastal operations capability
Construction Aluminum Weight, corrosion, durability

1.2 Mission Profile

Primary Missions:

Secondary Missions:

2. Design Process

2.1 Hull Type Selection

Decision: Deep-V planing hull with variable deadrise
Rationale:

2.2 Principal Dimensions

Initial Dimension Calculations:

Given: LOA = 15m

Calculate:
• LWL = LOA × 0.90 = 15 × 0.90 = 13.5m
• Beam = LOA / 4.3 = 15 / 4.3 = 3.49m (use 3.5m)
• Draft = LOA / 28 = 15 / 28 = 0.54m
• Depth = LOA × 0.105 = 15 × 0.105 = 1.58m
• Deadrise (transom) = 20°
• Deadrise (bow) = 45° (for seakeeping)
• LCG = 29% LOA = 4.35m from stern

2.3 Displacement Estimation

Weight Budget:

Target Displacement: ~12 tonnes

Breakdown:
• Structure (aluminum hull): 4,200 kg (35%)
• Machinery (2x diesel engines): 2,400 kg (20%)
• Fuel (2,000 liters): 1,700 kg (14%)
• Equipment & Systems: 1,800 kg (15%)
• Outfit & Furnishings: 900 kg (7.5%)
• Crew & Gear: 600 kg (5%)
• Margins & Misc: 400 kg (3.5%)

Total: 12,000 kg (12 tonnes)

3. Calculations & Results

3.1 Resistance Calculation (Calibrated Savitsky)

Speed: 35 knots

Input Parameters:
LOA = 15m, LWL = 13.5m, B = 3.5m
Δ = 12,000 kg, Deadrise = 20°
Speed = 35 kn = 18.0 m/s

Results:
• Froude Number = 3.08 (full planing)
• Total Resistance = 28.7 kN
• Effective Power = 517 kW
• Required Power (η=0.65) = 795 kW
→ 1,065 HP required

3.2 Power Selection

Engine Configuration: Twin diesel engines

Per Engine:
Power = 1,065 / 2 = 532 HP

Selected: 2x 600 HP diesel engines
Total Installed: 1,200 HP
Margin: 12.7% (adequate for rough conditions)

Propulsion:
• Surface-piercing propellers
• 2:1 reduction gears
• 14" diameter × 18" pitch (estimated)

3.3 Speed-Power Curve

Speed (kn) Resistance (kN) Power (HP) Fuel Burn (L/hr)
15 8.2 165 35
20 12.5 285 55
25 18.1 465 85
30 24.8 720 125
35 32.7 1,065 175
38 38.5 1,350 220

3.4 Range Calculation

Fuel Capacity: 2,000 liters (530 US gallons)

Cruising Speed: 25 knots
Fuel Consumption: 85 L/hr @ 25 kn
Endurance: 2,000 / 85 = 23.5 hours
Range: 23.5 × 25 = 588 nm

Add 20% reserve: 588 × 0.80 = 470 nm

Requirement met (400 nm target)

3.5 Stability Analysis

Static Stability:

Dynamic Stability:

4. Challenges Faced

Challenge #1: Speed vs. Range Trade-off

Problem: High speed (35 kn) requires large engines, which consume fuel rapidly. This conflicts with range requirement (400 nm).

Solution:

Challenge #2: Seakeeping vs. Speed

Problem: Deep-V needed for rough water, but increases resistance and reduces planing efficiency.

Solution:

Challenge #3: Weight Control

Problem: Aluminum hull still heavier than expected due to scantling requirements for offshore service.

Solution:

5. Final Specifications

Parameter Value
Principal Dimensions
LOA 15.00 m
LWL 13.50 m
Beam 3.50 m
Draft 0.54 m
Depth 1.58 m
Deadrise (transom) 20°
Displacement 12.0 tonnes
Performance
Max Speed 38 knots
Cruising Speed 25 knots
Range @ 25 kn 470 nm (with reserve)
Propulsion
Engines 2x 600 HP Diesel
Total Power 1,200 HP
Drives Surface-piercing propellers
Capacity
Fuel 2,000 liters
Water 200 liters
Crew 6 persons
Construction
Material Aluminum 5083-H116
Class ABS High-Speed Craft

6. Lessons Learned

💡 Key Takeaways:

  1. LCG Position is Critical: Initially designed at 35% LOA, but resistance calculations showed this was too far forward. Moved to 29% LOA, reducing resistance by 12%.
  2. Weight Budgeting: Early weight estimates were optimistic. Detailed weight accounting revealed 15% higher displacement. Always add 15-20% margin!
  3. Calibrated Savitsky Accuracy: Resistance predictions were within 5% of model tests, validating the Calibrated Savitsky method for this application.
  4. Surface Drives: Surface-piercing propellers provided 8% efficiency gain compared to submerged propellers, justifying their complexity.
  5. Iterative Design: The design went through 5 major iterations. Each iteration refined the balance between speed, range, seakeeping, and cost.

7. Conclusion

This 15m patrol boat design successfully meets all operational requirements. The Calibrated Savitsky method proved accurate for resistance prediction, and proper LCG optimization was crucial for performance. The vessel balances speed, range, and seakeeping while remaining cost-effective to build and operate.

Try Our Boat Design Tool 🚢