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				 Bought a Reinel 26' 
 
			
			Good grief, Jim you're writing a legal brief here!  And that's at the heart ofthe problem, you're approaching this as a lawyer, not a sailor!
 
 
 "Jim Cate"  wrote in message
 ...
 
 
 Jeff Morris wrote:
 
 
 You're outdoing yourself Jim.   Everything I've claimed about the Mac has
 come
 directly from the MacGregor sites, the dealer sites, and in a few cases, the
 bulletin boards of mac owners.  As I've said a number of times, I haven't
 been
 dumping on the mac, its your misrepresentation of their own published data
 that
 I've objected to.
 
 Jeff, you should understand that my concern is that the "Mac
 discussions" held on this ng in the past have not really been fair,
 balanced, considerations of the Macs. in which the issues were
 considered in a balanced, rational matter. Instead, what has typically
 happened is that some hapless Mac owner or inquirer has been ambushed by
 10 or 15 very biased "experts",  most of whom have never even sailed one
 of the Macs, much less the current 26M model  Upon getting attacked by
 the sarcastic anti-Mac "experts," most of these poor souls become
 intimidated and quickly move on, never stopping to ask what, exactly, is
 the source of information relied on by all the "experts" who have just
 jumped down their throat.
 
 You'll be hard pressed to find (much) of the bashing from me.  I've even agreed
 on numerous occasions that the Mac is a reasonable choice for some, and that
 over the years I've appreciated Roger's innovative approach.
 
 Jeff, I have nothing against you personally.
 You just happen to be the latest in a series of "experts" who have tried
 to put me down and ridicule many, many aspects of the Macs.
 
 I haven't ridiculed the boats so much as the marketing literature and sales
 approach.  Frankly, a 26 foot boat that can go 12 mph is impressive; why pile on
 bull**** be insisting it can do 18 knots?
 
 
 
 What's
 obviously troubling you is that you haven't succeeded in putting me in
 my place. - I keep popping back up.
 
 Actually, you've dug your hole deeper, that's why you're popping up less
 frequently!
 
 Frankly I enjoy your posts, they're much better than the political drivel that's
 taken over this board.
 
 As I have previously explained, I
 have professional responsibilities that keep me from following this ng
 on a daily basis, like you and others. Still, I'm still here. I think
 that what's bothering you is that most on this ng think that putting
 down a Mac enthusiast is supposed to be a simple, easy task, sort of
 like shooting fish in a barrel.
 
 You really think that, don't you?  Actually, I think most readers ignore these
 threads, just like I ignore most of the political nonsense.
 
 Yet it just doesn't seem to be working
 in this case, right Jeff?  And if you're honest, you would stop trying
 to maintain that my remarks are completely vacuous and without merit. -
 Instead, Jeff, you would be far more convincing if you were willing to
 acknowledge (as have I with respect to some of your comments) that at
 least some of my points are well taken.
 
 Actually, one problem I have is that many of your "points" are just plain
 boring.  No one in the history of this board has bothered trying to claim that
 they have a traveler, or adjustable jib tracks.   No real sailor talks about
 marketing hype and feature lists at all; the only thing that really matters is
 what you've actually done with the boat.  Since you haven't done anything yet,
 all I can do is point out that your achievements aren't likely to live up to
 your claims.
 
 And your "double hull" thing was just plain silly.
 
 
 When did I say that the warnings could be ignored? The fact that, in my
 opinion, the warnings evidence a concern on the part of their lawyers
 doesn't at all suggest that one should ignore them.
 
 
 You admit down below that you regularly ignore such warnings.
 
 Wrong again Jeff. I admit "down below" that I ignore warnings on
 Nautilus exercise machines that I might fall out of such machines onto a
 carpeted floor one foot down and hurt myself.
 
 When I listed many of the warnings that come with the Mac you claimed they are
 not to be taken literally; they are like the seatbelt warnings on a Nautilus.
 And you've said you regularly ignore those warnings.  How else can we reasonably
 interpret your intent here, other than meaning its OK to ignore the warnings
 about the Mac?
 
 ....
 
 
 Where did I KEEP QUOTING THE SPEED NUMBERS?
 
 
 You said a number of times you were getting a boat capable of 18 knots,
 sometimes you used 18 mph.  Here's a few examples
 
 "Am I going to be stranded off-shore in unexpected weather conditions? -
 (Actually, since the boat can motor back at 18 mph, it has a better
 chance of getting back to shore faster than a displacement boat."
 
 "I'm getting a boat that's capable of motoring in 1.5 feet of water and
 sailing offshore, motoring at 18 knots to a desired destination, "
 
 "Regarding access to good sailing areas, the MacGregor can plane out
 to the desired sailing are at around 15-18 knots"
 
 "Like, planing the boat at around 12 knots under sail, or 18
 knots under power."
 
 
 This is your typical bull****, Jim.  First you make the comments, then you
 deny
 it.  Haven't you figured out yet that its all on record?
 
 
 The above statements are all true, Jeff.
 
 They may be "true" but these speeds can only be achieved running without
 ballast, which is unsafe, and leaving behind key gear, such as the mast.  Almost
 every boat made can, under certain situations, achieve speeds much higher than
 is normal, but the speed boaters normally quote is the speed that they can
 achieve with the gear the normally carry, etc.   I've heard factory people claim
 they got my boat up to 17 knots, but when people ask me how fast it is, I tell
 them my experience.  Even though I've seen 13.5 knots, I tell them its usually
 between 7 and 9, sometimes over 10 if conditions are perfect.
 
 You, on the other hand, have taken the exaggerated claims and insisted that they
 will apply in your daily use.  But right from the start, we have to assume that
 you will actually carry the mast on board, that you'll have a few passengers,
 plus the appropriate gear.  You'll probably fill your fuel and water tanks.  And
 while you may have flat water sometimes, if you're heading out the Houston Ship
 Channel, you have to assume the chop will preclude running without ballast.  And
 powering offshore at 18 knots, especially in deteriorating weather, is probably
 completely impossible.
 
 
 
 
 Had I instead posted notes claiming that, under any conditions, and
 regardless of the load or weather, one can always motor back at 15-18
 knots, you might have a point.
 
 By repeatedly insisting that your claims are "true" you have been implying that
 they apply to your normal use.  You keep approaching this as a lawyer, not a
 sailor, Jim.  My entire point has been that the various claims you've made will
 not be achievable in normal use.  Even though you admitted at times that I'm
 correct, you keep claiming I'm bashing the Mac.
 
 What's wrong with admitting that in practice, your speed will be 10-12 mph, its
 still twice as fast as most 26 footers?
 
 ....
 
 
 
 The issue was never whether it was written by lawyers, actually I think it
 was
 Roger (or some other real sailor) who wrote them.  The issue is whether they
 a
 very serious warnings, or just "lawyer talk" to avoid frivolous lawsuits.
 First
 you claim they don't have to be taken literally, now you realize perhaps
 they're
 deadly serious.
 
 
 
 So you think you have a great "gotcha" here, right Jeff?  Sorry, no
 cigar this time. - Your "gotcha" doesn't hold water. My discussion of
 the notice was to the effect that I thought it revealed an intention to
 minimize potential liability relating to the water ballast arrangement.
 If one takes the notice literally, it would mean that owners of the
 Mac 26M should NEVER motor or sail their boats without the water
 ballast, because the first sentence of the warning says that the water
 ballast tank should be full when EITHER powering or sailing. THEN, in
 the next sentence, the notice refers the reader to instructions for
 operating the boat without the water ballast.  As I read the notice, the
 most reasonable interpretation they want to provide a clear warning
 about the potential danger of operating the boat without the water
 ballast. But they then indicate that, particularly when motoring, many
 owners will operate the boat without the ballast, when under moderate
 conditions. Reading comments on the Mac discussion groups also, it seems
 that many if not most of the Mac owners have operated their boats
 without the water ballast.
 
 You're going in circles here.  You're saying that the owners can pick and
 choose which warnings can be ignored, and which must be taken seriously.  Yet
 when two children die you say it was because negligence because the warnings
 were ignored.
 
 So tell us Jim, how fast have you gone without ballast?
 
 
 The fact that the notice appears to indicate that MacGregor is
 concerned about possible liability, and the fact that I suspect that it
 entails some legal implications, DOES NOT MEAN that the underlying
 message should not be taken seriously.  As I have said several times, I
 take their warnings quite seriously, even though, at the same time, I
 also recognize that they entail what I suspect are some legal
 considerations.  I also  think that they evidence a genuine concern for
 the safety of Mac owners generally.  Jeff, it's not a simple "either"
 question, as you seem to suggest, but rather a "both-and" issue.
 
 
 I don't doubt that some experienced skippers, in fairly protected situations,
 push the limits by ignoring the warnings.  This is true for all sorts of
 products, and generally its a good thing.  However, I don't see how this applies
 to the majority of buyers, since the boat is marketed as a family cruiser.  Most
 people, in most situations, should heed the warnings and expect performance
 consistent with following the warnings.
 
 
 
 
 You should also remember that in the new Mac 26M an additional 300 lbs
 of permanent ballast has been added, along with additional floatation in
 the mast, so that even if you motor without a full ballast tank, the
 boat still has a significant amount of (permanent) ballast.  However,
 motoring or sailing with the tank only partially filled, rather than
 completely full or empty, is not recommended.
 
 Once again, Jeff, the fact that the  warnings entail legal overtones and
 the fact that they are somewhat contradictory doesn't at all mean that
 the underlying concerns evidenced by the notice shouldn't be taken
 seriously. In other words, sometimes a little common sense is in order.
 
 (But of course, your interest in the matter isn't in arriving at a
 reasonable interpretation of the notice, is it Jeff?
 
 On the contrary, you're the one who made claims that ignore both the warnings
 and common sense.  For instance, you claimed that you could get offshore, with
 the boat loaded with guests and supplies, and get back ahead of bad weather, all
 at 18 knots (or sometimes 18 mph).
 
 The bottom line is that the high speeds can only be achieved with no ballast and
 completely unloaded; this is not consistent with taking your grandchildren out
 the Houston Ship Channel to sail "offshore."
 
 
 No, your interest
 in the matter is that you thought you had great "gotcha" trap going. -
 Right Jeff? Once again, you need to go back to school and take that
 "Logic 101" course, because  you sure aren't evidencing any. On the
 other hand, maybe you know that you're stretching the facts, and don't'
 want to admit it.  Maybe the problem is that you simply have a problem
 with basic intellectual honesty.
 
 Right Jim, you keep making this claim.  But you haven't explained the logic
 behind insisting that speeds achieved without the mast apply to your experience.
 Come on Jim, your whole point is been that claims that make no practical sense
 are still somehow "correct," but what's the point?    Is that what you mean by
 intellectual honesty?
 
 
 
 Bottom line Jim - how many 26 foot sailboats roll over because there are
 8 adults on deck?
 
 Jeff, my wife and I sailed on a new 25-foot Catalina (shoal draft, wing
 keel) a few months ago. Judging by the very alarming heel experienced
 when only ONE adult stepped onto the boat or moved around on it, it
 would have been easy for the Cat to roll over with a load of eight
 adults on top of the deck, particularly if the skipper was drunk,
 gunning the motor in a turn, with the passengers also drinking. If they
 were drinking and tried to hold onto the mast to keep from falling out
 in a turn it would have been a slam "dunk" that the boat would roll
 over.
 
 Perhaps, but its also very likely that the boat would have popped back up after
 dumping the passengers that were on deck.  The Mac 26X turned turtle and stayed
 there while the children trapped below drowned.  If you think a small boat with
 a 1000 pound keel will roll over the same way a Mac 26x with an empty tank will,
 you know very little about boats.
 
 Actually, Jeff, it was a great vindication of the validity of the
 MacGregor design.
 
 
 Two children drowning is a vindication???  You're one sick puppy, Jim.
 
 
 Nope, the vindication derives from the fact that eight passengers plus
 the drunk skipper survived, despite the boat being operated and used in
 a grossly negligent manner.
 
 There were a number of other boat nearby, they would have survived in any case.
 Besides, virtually all water ballast boats, and even many smaller keel  boats,
 have positive flotation.  Had MacGregor not included this feature, it would have
 been gross negligence on their part.
 
 
 
 
 
 Even thought the skipper, and probably many of the
 guests, were drunk, and even though the skipper ignored all safety
 warnings most skippers know, and even though he ignored all the warnings
 posted by MacGregor, and even thought the boat was grossly overloaded,
 and even though the skipper had pushed the throttle forward and was
 trying to maneuver the boat around a turn with eight adult passengers on
 the dec., nevertheless, the boat stayed afloat, and the eight passengers
 above-deck survived. - The boat didn't capsize and sink to the bottom as
 would be the case with many displacement boats, drowning all the
 passengers. - That's good, isn't it Jeff?
 
 
 How often do you hear of keel boats capsizing because they turned too
 quickly
 under power?   On any other boat this would never have happened.
 ...
 
 Jeff, how often do you hear of MacGregors capsizing because they turned
 too quickly under power?  Maybe 300 a year? Or is it more like 200 a
 year? Or perhaps 100 a year? No? How about 50 a year? - Surely, if the
 Macs are as unstable and defective as you suggest, you could EASILY
 easily find 50 reports of the boats capsizing each year because they
 were turned too quickly, Jeff.
 
 All you're saying is that virtually all Mac owners follow the warnings.   All
 I've been saying is that the warnings are deadly serious.   Frankly you keep
 missing the fundamental point here.  You're the one who kept claiming the
 warnings need not be taken literally, now you're saying that sometimes they must
 be.  Frankly, the real problem here was not the overloading or the drunk
 skipper - these are things we see every weekend.   The problem was have three
 children down below.  I'm sure the parents assumed they were relatively safe
 because normally, 26 foot sailboats don't roll over.
 
 
 ....
 
 
 But you already told us you don't wear that seatbelt, didn't you?
 
 As discussed above, what I said was that I don't wear a seat belt when
 working out on the Nautilus machines, Jeff. Do you think I ought to?
 That's what the instructions say. I do, however, wear a seat belt when
 driving my car. (For some reason, I'm really not too concerned about
 falling out of the Nautilus machines to the carpeted floor a foot below
 the seat.)
 
 
 So there you go - you're admitting that the warning need not always be followed.
 So when do you draw the line?   How about when your grandchildren are aboard, or
 when you're in a major ship channel, or when you're in the ocean, outside of
 protection?  In other words, many of the times you claimed you could go at 18
 knots?
 
 ....
 
 But in April you were talking about how you can get back at 18 mph if the
 weather turns bad?  Now you're admitting you can't do that, because it
 wouldn't
 be in accordance with the manual.
 
 Nope. The boat will motor at 18 mph under some conditions. I never said
 that it would motor at 18 mph under ANY conditions or circumstances, or
 even most of them, which is how you want to interpret my words.
 
 No Jim, you kept repeating your claims after it was pointed out that its highly
 unlikely you would ever achieve these speeds with your intended use.  You can't
 have it both ways, unless of course, if you're lawyer who doesn't actually care
 about reality.
 
 
 
 ....
 
 According to the Mac discussion groups, around 6,000 of just the 26X's
 were made. Similarly, a large number of 26Cs were made. Previously,
 MacGregor sold thousands of mostly smaller boats of various types. The
 bottom line, Jeff, is that although you go on and on about the serious
 defects of the Macs, you still can't come up with any evidence to back
 up your incredible claims that there are serious safety defects in any
 of the boats.
 
 I've never characterized the stability issue as a "defect."  I've only pointed
 out that the warnings are deadly serious, not to be ignored, especially when you
 have your grandchildren aboard.  I have pointed out that this is an unusual
 property for a 26 foot sailboat.  I can't count the number of times I've told
 someone, "Don't worry, it can't really tip over."  I'm guessing that's what the
 kids who drowned were told.
 
 
 You are the one asserting that the Macs are defective and
 unsafe. - YOU should provide the evidence to support your malicious
 assertions.
 
 I think that two dead children are all the proof needed to show that the
 warnings should be heeded.
 
 
 
 
 Secondly, I suspect that
 
 the vast majority of 26X sailors always keep the ballast tank full.   I
 know
 
 the
 
 one down the dock from me fills in the spring and empties in the fall.
 Corollary to this, almost all Mac sailors will admit that in practice, the
 
 top
 
 speed is more like 10 to 12 mph, not the 18 knots you claimed on numerous
 occasions.
 
 That's not what I see on the Mac discussion groups, Jeff.
 
 I easily found a thread with a title like "how fast do you really go?"  One or
 two posts claimed high speeds, but the majority of the responses were quite
 conservative.  I posted a number of them back in April but you chose to ignore
 them.  For instance, several people said it was hard to stay on plane if there
 was a moderate chop.
 
 
 
 ....
 
 
 So Jim, you keep claiming that I've been "bashing" the Mac.  Why don't you
 go
 back and really read my posts?   You'll notice that I started by saying the
 26M
 was a reasonable choice for some people, and that it had advantages in some
 environments.  Almost every negative comment I've made has had to do with
 your
 claims of speed, which are clearly contradicted by the companies own claims,
 or
 your inflated comments on the resale value and availability, or the warnings
 concerning the stability without ballast, or some of your other odd claims,
 like
 the "double hull."   I haven't "bashed" the mac, as a few others have, I've
 just
 insisted that you consider its attributes honestly.
 
 That's really considerate of you, Jeff. But as I have clearly
 demonstrated, in this and in previous notes, the problem with your
 interpretation of my comments is that you obviously interpret them in an
 extremely biased manner, carefully looking for the nits rather than
 than giving them a balanced, reasonable interpretation. You also love to
 "cherry-pick" among the hundreds of notes I have posted, sniffing out
 some that can be quoted out of context with the overall discussion
 rather than considering them in context.
 
 I've only insisted that you use common sense when you quote expected
 performance.  I don't think its biased at all to point out that speeds achieved
 without the mast on board probably aren't too significant.
 
 
 
 So you haven't been "bashing" the Mac 26M Jeff(even when you state or
 infer that it is marketed under false or misleading claims, and that is
 a seriously compromised, unsafe design).
 
 I never said it was unsafe; I said that it would be unsafe if you ignored the
 warning that you claimed did not have to be taken literally.
 
 
 Well, in that vein, I think you
 should also acknowledge that I haven't been "puffing" the Mac 26M  by
 claiming that it is "better than" other heavy displacement boats such as
 the Valiant 40 or various other boats. For example, I never stated that
 the Mac would out-sail the Valiant, with the Valiant's substantially
 longer waterline and heavy keel (except possibly under special
 conditions in which the Mac may be sailed on a plane), or that the Mac
 would point higher, or provide a more comfortable ride in heavy weather,
 etc. I also never stated that the Mac would be a suitable boat for
 extended blue-water crossings, as would the Valiant and other similar
 boats.  I also never stated that it had enough storage room for an
 extended cruise, etc.
 
 So, do you want credit for not being a total loony tune?  OK, you do seem to
 have some sanity, unlike a few of the Mac posters.
 
 Frankly, I think you've made great progress just since you've bought to boat.
 You've started to back off from your worst claims.
 
 
 
 Thus, with respect to all those criteria, many
 sailboats are "better" than the Mac. So, Jeff, how about recognizing for
 once that I  also have tried to provide a balanced evaluation of the
 Macs, recognizing that the Macs aren't a great sailboat in all respects.
 
 OK, but I'd rather see some real trip reports from you.  You've had it over 3
 months and you've only been out 3 times?  Good grief, man!   I thought the point
 of a boat like that is that its easy to go out for a quick trip!
 
 
 
 
 
 
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
				
			
			
			
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