Why do people buy cruising catamarans ?
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			sherwindu wrote: 
 
 Paddy Malone wrote:sherwindu has contributed one important fact to this 
 discussion when in his 
 
 
first post he stated "I have never even sailed on a cat myself". 
 
 
 
 I am not questioning the comfort of a multihull, it's speed, etc.  I'm basing my 
 views on many years 
 of ocean sailing experience and my education as an applied physicist/engineer. 
 My concern is one 
 of safety.  I feel that a catamaran is not immune to tipping over, especially if 
 conditions do not permit 
 the reefing of sails.  These comments about monohulls sinking is overstated. 
 Sure they do, but not 
 necesarily because of their basic design.  Catamarans are made of fiberglass, 
 etc., which last I heard 
 is something that is heavier than water and will sink under certain 
 circumstances.  Reducing sail can 
 decrease the probability of a roll in both monohulls and multihulls.  Freak wave 
 action can roll a boat 
 over even with these precautions.  I personally would feel safer and more 
 comfortable in a boat that 
 I know is going to come back up on it's own, with or without it's rigging, than 
 hoping I can get into a 
 watertight compartment with my boat floating upside down.  The problem with 
 taking a multihull on an 
 extended voyage, say an ocean crossing, is that the chances of running into real 
 bad weather increase. 
 In the very extreme, one can take down all sails in a monohull, batten down the 
 hatches, put out a sea 
 anchor and ride things out.  If for some reason the boat is rolled over, it will 
 right itself.  Can't say the 
 same thing for a multihull.  Granted this is an extreme case, but if I were 
 planning an ocean crossing, 
 it would certain cross my mind as a possibility. 
 
                               Sherwin D. 
 
 
Archaic thinking.  Adlard Coles disproved the lying ahull theory years 
ago.  Multihulls have been crossing oceans for centuries. 
 
Gaz 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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