Engineers have it right!
Yep, another engineer chiming in ... displacement weight should equal the weight lifted by the crane. So, why is there a discrepancy? Maybe some lift operators unscrupulously have erroneous scales so that they can overcharge (if they are paid by weight). Look for certification to be protected. Maybe boat manufacturers are notoriously inaccurate? IS there and answer?Sorry jtaylor, Whisky II, and Claude, your arguments are misleading. The weight of an object submersed in water is its actual weight MINUS the weight of water it displaces. My mooring block is a cubic yard of concrete and it weighs about 4,050 pounds (150 x 27) because concrete weighs 150 pounds per cubic foot. It displaces 1,650 pounds of water (62.4 x 27). Therefore it weighs 2,365 pounds as it is resting on the bottom of the lake. A cubic yard of iron would be far heavier on the bottom of the lake, not the same as the concrete, as your arguement implies.A log, on the other hand, has air nearly locked in vessels that run throughout the fiberous cellulose. Cellulose has a specific gravity that is only slightly heavier than water, though it varies depending upon the species of wood. I say the air is nearly locked because it takes a long time for the air to escape. When the wood is dry, its buoyancy is pretty close to neutral because the total volume of the wood (and air locked inside) weighs slightly less than 62.4 pcf. When the log becomes waterlogged, the air in the vessels is replaced with water and the log sinks. You won't be able to lift a big log in water then ... not without a crane.(I studied Forest Products, too)