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Exam (elaborations)

VA boating safety license notes

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This covers all important information given in the education portion of the VA boaters safety education for the exam

Institution
VA BOATING
Course
VA BOATING











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Institution
VA BOATING
Course
VA BOATING

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Uploaded on
July 17, 2025
Number of pages
52
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Only questions

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B ow : Front of a vessel

Cleat: Metal fitting on which a rope can be fastened

Gunw ale: Upper edge of vessel’s side (generally pronounced "gunnel")

Hull: Body of a vessel

Por t: Left side of a vessel

Pr opeller : Rotates and powers a boat forward or backward

Star boar d: Right side of a vessel

Ster n: Rear of a vessel

B eam : Maximum width of a vessel

Dr aft: Depth of water needed to float a vessel

Fr eeboar d: Distance from water to lowest point of the boat where water
could come on board

K eel: Main centerline (backbone) of a vessel or the extension of hull that
increases stability in the water

Hull: Body of a vessel; basic structure or shell



Per sonal w ater cr aft: A small vessel that uses an inboard jet drive as its
primary source of propulsion and is designed to be operated by a person or

,persons sitting, standing, or kneeling on the vessel rather than inside the
vessel



Displacem ent Mode: A planing hull, when operated at very slow speeds,
will cut through the water like a displacement hull.



Plow ing Mode: As speed increases, a planing hull will have a raised bow,
reducing the operator’s vision and throwing a very large wake. Avoid
maintaining a speed that puts your boat in plowing mode.



Planing Mode: Your boat is in planing mode when enough power is applied
so that the hull glides on top of the water. Different boats reach planing mode
at different speeds.

B ow : Front of a vessel

length over all: Length of the hull excluding any attachments

Rudder : Steering device, usually a vertical blade attached to a post at, or
near, the stern of the boat

Ster n: Rear of a vessel

Pr opeller : Rotating device that turns and powers a boat forward or backward

Tiller : Lever used to turn a rudder to steer a boat

Tr ansom : Vertical surface at the back of the hull

,Im peller : Device used to pump and force water under pressure through a
steering nozzle at the rear of the vessel



Intake: Opening in the hull that draws water toward the impeller



intake gr ate: Screening cover over the intake, which prevents large debris
from entering



Por t: Left side of a vessel

safety lanyar d: Short cord for attaching the engine cut-off switch (ECOS) to
the operator's wrist or personal flotation device (PFD)

Star boar d: Right side of a vessel

steer ing contr ol: Means of controlling the steering nozzle

B ow : Front of a vessel

Dr aft: Depth of water needed to float a vessel

dr ive shaft: The long stem connection between the motor and the impeller

steer ing nozzle: Device used for directing the stream of water to the left or
right at the stern of the PWC, which steers the PWC

Ster n: Rear of a vessel

Halyar ds: Lines (ropes) used to raise and lower the sails

, Sheets: Lines (ropes) used to control the angle of the sails to the wind



Capsize: To turn on the side or turn completely over



Sw am p: To fill with water



B ilge: Interior of the hull below the floorboards; lowest part of a vessel’s
interior where the sides of the vessel curve in to form the bottom



Coupler : The part of the trailer that attaches to the ball hitch on a towing
vehicle



Bunks: Wooden supports on which the vessel rests while on the trailer




LESSONS:

Boats with displacem ent hulls move through the water by pushing the
water aside and are designed to cut through the water with very little
propulsion.

● If you lower a boat into the water, some of the water moves out of the
way to adjust for the boat. If you could weigh that displaced water, you
would find it equals the weight of the boat. That weight is the boat’s
displacement.
● Boats with displacement hulls are limited to slower speeds.
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