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![]() felton wrote: On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 23:49:36 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote: are you under the impression that a mac26 is double hulled? SV He may be thinking that a liner is a second hull, which will prevent him from sinking if one of those drunken powerboaters hits him doing 60mph. Perhaps Macs have foam floatation, as most of them would otherwise be on the bottom. If I make it up to the Valiant yard in the next few days, perhaps I will suggest that they may want to "improve" their boats with some of these innovations ![]() Here is a question for Jim...a drunken powerboater is heading towards you. You can elect to be in a Valiant or a Mac. Which do you choose? ![]() more survivable boat in any scenario than a Valiant or any other "real" sailboat, then thanks for the comic relief. If I could anticipate that a drunken powerboater were going to hit me going 50 mph, I would prefer a Valiant, although even then, I don't think you could predict what would happen. (It's possible that the hull of the Valiant would be compromised, in which case its keel would quickly pull it to the bottom.) But a new Valiant would cost around $400,000, normally equiped, or more than 10 times the cost of the Mac loaded with navigation and autosteering. - You can't always get what you want, but sometimes, if you try real hard, you just might get what you need. - Which in my case is the 26M. Now, let me ask you a question. - If you were sailing in a displacemenet boat in unexpected high winds, and you had your son tethered to the boat for safety, and it became obvious that the boat was going to founder, would you prefer that the boat have positive foam flotation, as in the MacGregor, or would you prefer that your son be on a discplacement boat with a heavy keel that would drag the boat and its occupants to the bottom within a few minutes? The obvious solution to your dilemma was to have chosen a marina closer to where you wish to sail. You can drive a car faster than even the motorboat you have chosen will go. I will grant you that if your only criteria was how fast you can motor in your "sailboat", then you have probably chosen wisely. For $30k you could have bought a pretty decent powerboat instead. Live and learn. Felton, I don't like power boats. I want the power capabilities of the Mac because it will enable us to get to good blue water sailing areas more quickly, and also permit us to fish, and let our grandkids play safely in shallow water, or beach the boat. It will also permit us to motor out, do some sailing and some fishing and/or some swimming, and motor back within a few hours, rather than taking the entire weekend. Jim p, "Jim Cate" wrote 6 times... (1) - If the lower hull is compromised, the inner hull remains. |