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![]() Talk about living in Lala Land!!! There is no way a heavy, full-keeled tub like yours is going to walk away from a C&C 27 in light winds. You must have been drinking way too much overproof that day. "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message ... I found that to be true of the C&C 27 I sailed with up north. It was odd at the time since all the fin keelers were favouring to keep up speed by gybing downwind yet Bill kept his C&C27 wing on wing alongside my Nordica 30. I attributed it to his skills as a sailor. He could surf above his hull speed while I did hull speed in moderate winds. A note of consideration is that if both of us were flying our chutes in light air... I would walk away from the C&C27 .... probably due to my longer waterline. Also.... I recall the C&C27 to have a lower PHRF than my Nordica 30... mine was 180. I would still elect to gybe downwind in light air and/or high wave heights/confused seas if I was in a rush.... which I usually am not. Nonetheless... I would say I elect to wing on wing DDW about 90% of the time. CM wrote in message ... | On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 18:46:06 -0400, "Simple Simon" wrote: | | That is incorrect information for any displacement monohull where | it is always faster to run straight downwind. | | Baloney! An under canvassed tank like yours or Bobadil's might benefit quite a | bit from gibeing back and forth rather than going directly downwind. I do better | going strait downwind, because I can put up the mylar main and 170 genoa, or a | spinnaker and take advantage. | | BB |
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