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"Jim Cate" wrote in message
... Your boat is an unusual design. No, it a pretty standard design for a crusing catamaran. As I said, your boat is an unusual design. Only a smallpercentge of cruising sailboats are cats. Look around, Jim. Cats may be a minority, but many thousands have been built. Prout built 5000, and possibly has had more circumnavigations than Valiant; the French have built even more. Certainly, a lot more money is spent on cruising cats than tralorable sailboats with 50 hp engines. BTW, you once mentioned the possibility for spending over $50K for this boat. Its far less than that even fully equipped with 50 hp motor, roller reefing, lines led aft, GPS chart plotter, auto steering, vhf, radar, etc. I didn't mean this particular boat. I meant you implied you were willing to spend more when you were searching. For that money, you could have bought a used Gemini 30 or maybe a F27. Shallow draft, speed under power and sail, a LOT more fun. Lots of used boats here at reasonable prices, but all of them had problems. Sounds like you didn't look at many boats. Not many on his ng would float after a collision. - In most of them, the lead keel would quickly drag the boat down to the bottom. Most of the boats owned by this group would not be holed by a collision. In fact, I've seen a variety of "booboos" but I can't remember one now that put a boat at serious risk of sinking. (I'm sure one will come to mind.) However, I've seen a few that if the target had been a Mac, it would have been chopped in half. In that unlikely event, the Mac would still float. Maybe, but in how many pieces? And how far would you grandchildren be scattered? Remember, drownings don't happen from sinking (according to the statistics), the happen from capsizing and falling off of unstable boats. You keep solving the problems that don't exist. .... You seem to be very concerned with 30 foot breaking waves. Not really. You need professional help, not a boat. Actually, I rather thing that anyone who DOESN'T take such weather conditions seriously, and prepare for them, is the one who needs professional help. Oh, yes, Jim, you're prepared all right! |