OK - bulbous bows! I will have to try hard to prevent this getting too technical, but here goes
In 2000 I spent some weeks at the Aust Maritime College testing facility in Launceston, Tasmania. I had a full-bodied bulk carrier that was really chewing through the fuel, plus, it had some very undesirable wave-making abilities (ie, it produces a very big bow wave, which generates much wash on the shore, plus gives little boat owners a big fright when they don't realise what is coming.)
So, I had a 2 metre long model of the hull lofted from the ship's lines plans, and we had a supercomputer doing 94 computational fluid dynamics options on the bulb sizes and shapes that should be tested. Much info was obtained before the 2 trial bulb sizes were determined. One statement below (Para 8.) could be directly related to why the QE2 does NOT have a large bulb - those Scottish naval architects knew what they were doing:-
Aspects of Bulb Design (Pp 208, Col 2, para 2 & 3)
7. “In the preceding sections it has been shown that a well-dimensioned bulbous bow improves the performance of a ship in many ways by smoothing the flow around the forebody and by reducing wave-making resistance.”
8. “In general it may be stated that a hydrodynamically good main hull with low wave making does not need a bulbous bow in any case. (This would appear to be applicable to QE2)
But ships with pronounced bad wave making should always be fitted with a bulb. For ships already built, an additive bulb will in general be the best solution, while for a new design, an implicit bulb might be an advantage”.
This last statement refers almost directly to the ship I was having problems with (also a well-built Scottish-born vessel, and at 30 years old, has now carried over 7 million tons of bulk cement and is still going strong.)
When a vessel's forward-facing bow plating pushes into the seas due to the forward motion of the ship, it creates huge resistance on that plating while pushing the water out around the ship's bow. So much so that the seas actually ride up the plating (forming the bow wave) before falling away to the side.
By fitting a correctly shaped bulb (and they are all different shapes, depending the the beam-to-draft ratio of the particular ship, it's speed, it's beam, etc) the bulb can actually create a 'depression' in the water flow. If the bulb is sized correctly, then that 'depression' in the water flow will coincide with the the forward-facing area of the bow plating where the area of maximum resistance to flow is normally experienced, and will reduce the bow wave to almost nothing. This can result in up to a 7% reduction in fuel consumption, or an increase in speed for the same consumption, if it is designed correctly.
However, a bulb only works well over a very limited speed range, and it ONLY works when FULLY submerged. When not submerged, it actually INCREASES the fuel consumption! (Think of all those ships you see steaming around with their bulbs sticking out, and how much excess fuel they are burning!!)
The bulbs trialled on the previously-mentioned bulk carrier worked very well (the larger one worked better) and showed fuel savings of 7+%, but ONLY over 13 knots - below that speed it actually created a fuel penalty.
Everybody was happy with this result, then I told them I wanted the trials repeated with the ship in the ballast condition (as this ship only carries bulk cement, it is in ballast for 50% of it's travels). The resulting trials showed the large bulb gave a 23-27% INCREASE in fuel consumption when not submerged (which it wouldn't be when the ship was in ballast). Project instantly cancelled, and the bulb was never fitted!!!
So, those naval architects at Robb Caledon Shipyard in Dundee really knew what they were about, and had designed the best bow and hull shape for ALL conditions.
Incidently, the inside of a bulb is normally part of the forepeak ballast tank, so is often full of water. Come survey time, it is often only the skinniest people who can wriggle inside it to carry out a structural inspection, so the bigger the bulb, the happier people will be.
I have all the test photos somewhere in my files and will post a couple of the better ones.
Incidently, if you ever want to have everyone staring at you in Launceston, Melbourne, and Auckland airports, try walking around with a 7-foot long, bright yellow ship's hull standing upright in the trolley in front of you!
Cheers
Skilly