Pearson 33 Gross Tonnage

Mar 10, 2017
4
Pearson 33 Myrtle Beach
10930 is the displacement which is different from its tonnage. "Tonnage" is the volume to cargo volume.
 

SG

.
Feb 11, 2017
1,670
J/Boat J/160 Annapolis
Do you want this for purposes of documentation or some other reason?

Gross tonnage
is a measurement of total capacity expressed in volumetric tons of 100 cubic feet; it is calculated by adding the underdeck tonnage and the internal volume of tween-decks and deck space used for cargo. The measurement is used in assessing harbour dues and canal transit dues for merchant ships.
 
Mar 10, 2017
4
Pearson 33 Myrtle Beach
I need to tonnage to upgrade my Captain's license. I just haven't been able to find the tonnage anywhere (I can find the displacement)...just not the tonnage
 
Nov 8, 2010
11,386
Beneteau First 36.7 & 260 Minneapolis MN & Bayfield WI
Don't they teach that on the Captains test??
 
Mar 10, 2017
4
Pearson 33 Myrtle Beach
Yes they teach the formula but you need measurements that I no longer have.
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,725
- - LIttle Rock
You should find the information you need here:
https://www.uscg.mil/hq/msc/tonnage/docs/TG-1_Current.pdf

Meanwhile, some not only entertaining, but also useful trivia on the subject:

Tonnage has nothing to do with the weight of your boat. It is a measure
of how much wine a vessel can carry.

The word "tun" was originally a size of a cask used to ship wine from
Spain & Portugal to England. In 1347 a tax of 3 shillings per tun was
imposed and this was called "tonnage." A ship's size became known by the
number of casks it could carry, and the word tonnage started being used
to describe a ship's size.

Rummage was the manner in which the wine casks were stored in the hold of the ship and came to refer to the whole ship's cargo. After a voyage any unclaimed and damaged cargo was stacked on the dock beside the boat and offered for sale-- a rummage sale.

It was found that if you took the length x the breadth x the depth of
the hold under the deck and divided by 100 it was close to the number of
casks. That is where we get the "Measurement ton" of 100 cubic feet per
ton.

There are several kinds of tonnage: The first two are used by the tax
collector. The next two are used by designers. The fifth and sixth are
used by freight salesmen and canal operators and the last one is used by
the USCG for documenting boats.

Gross Tonnage - is the internal volume in cubic feet of the vessel
minus certain spaces above the main or "tonnage" deck, like stacks and
ventilators, which are called "exemptions" .

Net Registered Tonnage - is obtained by deducting from the gross tonnage
the volume of space that can't be used for paying cargo or passengers,
that is to say the space occupied by the engines, the crew's quarter,
the stores, etc.

Displacement Tonnage - is the actual weight of the water "displaced" by
the ship and is usually quoted in long tons of 2240 lbs.

Light Displacement Tonnage - is the weight with nothing in it.

Loaded Displacement Tonnage - is the fully loaded weight to the maximum
and is on her summer draft in salt water.

Deadweight Tonnage - is the difference between Light and Loaded
Displacement Tonnage....the actual carrying capacity of the vessel.

Panama & Suez Canal Tonnages - these are different from the internationally
accepted definitions. There used to be a lot of variations between countries and the
canal owners thought they were being conned, so they came up with their own definitions.

Simplified Measurement System - The USCG decided that all this was way too
much for bureaucrats to deal with for yachts so they came up with
their own formula:

Take the horizontal distance between the outboard ends of the boat not
including rudders and bow sprits. Multiply that by the maximum beam outside to outside.
Multiply that by the distance from the sheer line not including bulwarks
or cap rails to the outside bottom of the hull not including the keel.
Add the volume of the deck house/cabin top. Multiply by .5 for sailboats and .67 for power boats.
Divide by 100.

This will give you the "Gross Tonnage". Net tonnage is 90% of gross for
sailboats and 80% for power boats.

It should be obvious to anyone who's managed to get this far that your boat's "tonnage" no longer has anything to do with anything real; it only exists in the mind of some government bureaucrat.