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![]() OzOne wrote: On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 10:45:12 +0930, Flying Tadpole scribbled thusly: OzOne wrote: On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 17:05:18 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz" scribbled thusly: I'm sorry... I was thinking catamaran/trimaran.... On the multis when it gets really tough, the centreboard/boards are pulled up to save them, allow the boat to be pushed sideways and to stop it tripping over the boards. And indeed, I was always told, by my designer among others, that that is also what should be done in centreboarders in those conditions. Whhhh oooeeee Baby...now that would take some balls! I suspect that it would take some balls-up to begin with: it's for survival conditions, eg in a SydneyHobart weather bomb, and any sane centreboarder would either have been close to shelter or heading north I would have thought. This is why i don't see Lady Kate as a large-ocean-crosser. :^| Anyway, never having been in survival conditions: Then again pulling it partially up would work. It does. This I've done on beats in aprticularly bad chop and 30knot winds on the Murray Lakes (remember, no wave5') to stop tripping and knocking down. But in those conditions, the hard chine to leeward is dug right in (and can be dug harder if the traveller is brought up a bit) so leeway isn't too bad at all. But the thought of slithering sideways on a breaking wave in a storm off Wedge Island just doesn't appeal, somehow. -- Flying Tadpole ------------------------- Break Away, Sail Away and putz away now at http://music.download.com/internetopera |
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