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I'm not the one bragging about being aboard boats that
get structure stove in by large waves am I? I've sailed up and down many a fifty footer with no problem. Any and all structure aboard my boat is still intact and shows no wave damage. I'll admit I've never even seen a hundred-footer in person but that's because I'm smart enough to avoid them. Can you claim the same? S.Simon "otnmbrd" wrote in message hlink.net... comments interspersed: Simple Simon wrote: You are about as stupid as the other motor boat captains who continue to plague this group even though I have pointed out time and time again how unwelcome they all are. Big rogue waves are not necessarily breaking waves. You should realize this. Don't you even recall the fact that in the open ocean, off soundings tsunamis are not even noticeable from the deck of a ship or a sailboat. This is because even thought they may be 100 feet tall they have such a long wave length that are more like the rise and fall of the tide than a wave. I think you'll find that a Tsunami, doesn't gain height until it approaches shoaling water, but agree, that a "rogue" is not necessarily a breaking wave. Not all rogue waves are like you poor motorboat schmucks envision. You idiots watch movies like the "Perfect Storm" and see some stupid fishing boat attempting to motor up the face of a huge breaking wave and think that is how it is done. Any fool knows that is NOT how it is done in a sailboat. BG I don't need Hollywood to show me 30cm waves .... been dere done dat, and normally, if we are in a storm like that we will endeavor to be taking those seas on the bow, rather than head on, but a rogue doesn't always give you the time to set this up (sometimes, head on is all you can do BG and you're happy to be able to do that). Any ballasted sailboat has a much greater ability to remain upright on the face of such a rogue wave than a motorboat without such an advantageous stability curve. G now your an expert on stability? I doubt it. Now, back to the question of big ships being more damaged by these freak waves. Yes, they are. They can be stove in because they present far more area to water crashing down on the structure and they are not designed to survive such forces. Small vessels have smaller surface area and only need to withstand much smaller forces. If this were not the case one would not see so many unbroken light bulbs littering the beaches where such fragile items have landed after voyages of thousands of sea miles. Your general lack of experience is showing again .... stick to small sailboats in Tampa Bay. otn |
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