A 'bulbous bow', a feature of many modern
ship hulls, is a protruding bulb at the
bow (or front) below the
waterline. Usually visible only when a ship is in
drydock, the bulb modifies how water flows around the hull, reducing
drag and increasing in speed, range, and
fuel efficiency. Ships with bulbous bows generally have 12 to 15 percent better fuel efficiency than similar vessels without them.
Bulbous bows achieve maximum effect at a narrow range of speeds over 6
knots (Bray,
website). At other speeds, they can increase drag. They have the greatest effect on large ships such as
freighters,
navy vessels and various
passenger ships. They are rarer on recreational boats designed for wide speed ranges and
planing over the water.
How they work

The bulbous bow of the
cable layer ''Solitaire'' in drydock.
The
fluid dynamics of bulbous bows can be calculated.
Long
waves are faster, so a ship that wants to go fast has to excite long waves and not short ones. In a conventionally shaped bow, a
bow wave forms immediately before the bow. When a bulb is placed below the water ahead of this wave, water is forced to flow up over the bulb. If the trough formed by water flowing off of the bulb coincides with the bow wave, the two partially
cancel out and reduce the vessel's wake. While inducing another wave stream saps energy from the ship, canceling out the second wave stream at the bow changes the pressure distribution along the hull, thereby reducing wave resistance. The effect that pressure distribution has on a surface is known as the
form effect.
Another explanation notes that water flowing over the bulb depresses the ship's bow and keeps it trimmed better.
A sharp bow would produce waves and low drag like a bulbous bow, but waves coming from the side would strike it harder. Also, in heavy seas, water flowing around the bulb dampens pitching movements like a squiggle
keel. The blunt bulbous bow also produces higher pressure in a large region in front, making the bow wave start earlier.
Development

A bulbous bow with a complex shape. The through tunnels contain electric motor-driven propellors called bowthrusters to enable dock maneuvering without the aid of a
tugboat
The first bulbous bows appeared in the
1920s with the introduction of the ''
Bremen'' and ''
Europa'', two German North Atlantic
ocean liners. ''Bremen,'' which appeared in 1929, was able to win the coveted
Blue Riband of the Atlantic with a speed of 27.9 knots.
Smaller passenger liners such as the American ''President Hoover'' and ''President Coolidge'' of
1931 began to appear with bulbous bows although they were still viewed by many ship owners and builders as experimental.
In 1935 the French superliner ''
Normandie'' coupled a bulbous bow with a radically redesigned hull shape and was able to achieve speeds in excess of 30 knots. At the time ''Normandie'' was famous for (among other things) her clean entry into the water and her greatly reduced bow wave. Normandie's great rival, the British liner ''
Queen Mary'' achieved equivalent speeds with a non-bulbous traditional stem and hull design. However, the crucial difference lay in the fact that ''Normandie'' achieved these speeds with approximately thirty percent less engine horsepower than ''Queen Mary''—and with a corresponding reduction in fuel use.
Bulbous bows were further developed and used by the
Japanese. Some
World War II-era Japanese battleships such as the
''Yamato'' were fitted with bulbous bows. However, Japanese research into this area did not spread to the western world, and much of the advances were lost post-war.
It is unclear when bulbous bows were conclusively first examined by western researchers, but scientific papers on the subject were first published in the
1950s. Engineers began experimenting with bulbous bows after discovering that ships fitted with a
ram bow were exhibiting substantially lower drag characteristics than predicted, and eventually found that they could reduce drag by about 5%. Experimentation and refinement slowly improved the geometry of bulbous bows, but they were not widely exploited until computer modelling techniques enabled researchers at the
University of British Columbia to increase their performance to a practical level in the
1980s.
Sonar Domes
Some
warships specialized for
anti-submarine warfare use a specifically shaped bulb as a hydrodynamic housing for a
sonar transducer, which resembles a bulbous bow but has only incidental hydrodynamic purpose. The transducer is a large cylinder or sphere composed of a
phased array of
ultrasonic acoustic transducers. The entire compartment is flooded with water and the acoustic window of the bulb is made of
fiber-reinforced plastic or another material (such as
rubber) transparent to the transmitted and received underwater sounds.
References
★ Bray, Patrick J. (no date).
The Bulbous Bow - What is it?. Retrieved
April 1,
2005.
External link
★
Nordhavn's & BC Research Institute video comparing bulbous to conventional bows