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#1
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The C&C 27 Mk V cockpit is designed for hanging out. No big winches to get in
the way...and only a puny tiller for those who like long sticks! http://newimages.yachtworld.com/1/0/7/7/4/1077418_6.jpg Bwahahahahahaha! RB |
#2
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The C&C 27 Mk V cockpit is designed for hanging out. No big winches to get in
the way...and only a puny tiller for those who like long sticks! Looks pretty cool to me. I like the tiller extension and the reverse camber coamings - sail it like a big dinghy. |
#3
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I don't much like the traveller in front of the cockpit. It
just creates a hazard. "SkitchNYC" wrote in message ... The C&C 27 Mk V cockpit is designed for hanging out. No big winches to get in the way...and only a puny tiller for those who like long sticks! Looks pretty cool to me. I like the tiller extension and the reverse camber coamings - sail it like a big dinghy. |
#4
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You're right. Rather than have it right there in the
way it would be smart to put a mid-boom sheeting traveler on the coach. The picture shows an example of poor design. S.Simon "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... I don't much like the traveller in front of the cockpit. It just creates a hazard. "SkitchNYC" wrote in message ... The C&C 27 Mk V cockpit is designed for hanging out. No big winches to get in the way...and only a puny tiller for those who like long sticks! Looks pretty cool to me. I like the tiller extension and the reverse camber coamings - sail it like a big dinghy. |
#5
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The Irwin 30 we borrowed for a season had that, and I thought it was a horrible design. A
few years later a friend had to be taken to the emergency room for a Cat Scan after being whacked by the mainsheet in a jibe. The skipper said "yea, someone gets hit by that every year!" Following that he relocated the traveler to the coachroof. One reason why we went for the new PDQ, rather than slightly used, is that they relocated the traveler to the hardtop, so there are no dangerous lines in the cockpit. "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... I don't much like the traveller in front of the cockpit. It just creates a hazard. "SkitchNYC" wrote in message ... The C&C 27 Mk V cockpit is designed for hanging out. No big winches to get in the way...and only a puny tiller for those who like long sticks! Looks pretty cool to me. I like the tiller extension and the reverse camber coamings - sail it like a big dinghy. |
#6
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Jonathan Ganz wrote:
I don't much like the traveller in front of the cockpit. It just creates a hazard. Depends on the boat, depends on the cockpit design. Unless you're talking a 40 footer, aracer/cruiser is not going to have a big enough cockpit to split and run the traveler across the middle. A bridge deck traveller is the only sensible choice. Of course, some are poorly designed and/or afterthoughts. Some boats have short booms and don't have much sail area, so the leverage given up by putting the traveller further forward, above the companionway, is not too bad. But on a boat with a decent amount of horsepower in the rig, this is just going to make the main harder to trim. Might as well not have a traveller. Also, it's in the way of control lines. Another option is to put the traveller across the back of the cockpit. This is a good idea in boats with really long booms and wide aft sections; otherwise the traveller is too far back & too short to add much control over a simple centerline sheet block. It's noteworthy that all the hot rod racing dinghies don't even fool with travellers any more. They all have bridles and strong boom vangs. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
#7
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And contrary to what some of the armchair "experts" here think, you CAN get
more than 100% out of a boat. If you knew anything about sailing, you would know why. Such a subjective concept, I amazed that anyone would debate it as point of fact. Oh, wait...it's Binary Jane and his baby C&C 27 that costs less than my station wagon! Maybe he could get 40% out of it! 34XL, baby! Bwahahahahahaha! RB |
#8
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It's placed where it logically
belongs for this boat. In the way? RB |
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