I am interested in studying the design and engineering of flying boats, to understand, before building, if any of the ideas I have about flying boats or other* seaplanes will work. The posts here suggest that you have a lot of engineering information that has been too uninteresting to most to post but might be very useful to a few of us, detailed blueprint hull profiles, for example. In exchange, perhaps I and "any others out there listening" with the right interest and skills can generate some information of more-general interest, perhaps even a new flying boat.
* Obviously a colonial
I know what some of you are thinking, but don't worry. I won't try to build my flying boat out of light electrical conduit. Someone actually did design and build a land plane framed entirely with conduit and flew the plane to an air show, where my father and the other kind pilots and mechanics insistently offered him and the plane a ride home in something else. Actually, I have aerospace and mechanical engineering degrees and experience with welding, composite layups, mold building, electric wiring, engine overhauls, electronics, and so on. Alas, I am not a billionaire--otherwise I would have already posted photos of a two-seat, two-engine, mini-S.66, my first thought...
Hull design and matching the hull with the wing design are the "missing pieces" of designing a flying boat with modern aeronautical knowledge, materials, and tools. With such, a light wing can have great span and strength and aerodynamic efficiency, but the hull must also be efficient and the two well-matched to make the most of such a wing.