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#21
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Chris Newport wrote:
On Friday 22 October 2004 1:58 am in uk.rec.sailing jspeer wrote: Of course you could go with a catamaran, but I've never been comfortable offshore in a boat that is as stable upside-down as right-side up:-) Oh dear - that old chestnut again. Cruising cats do not get blown down. Racing multihulls use the inherent stability of multihulls to crowd on more sail, so they can have problems, but cruising cats are more sensibly designed. Several Prouts and several Wharrams have circumnavigated. James Wharram has written an excellent paper on this, you need to keep the centre of effort low and use sensible amounts of sail. He also advocates sails with calibrated strenth which will shred before tipping the boat in the case of the sudden storm that tends to blow up out of nowhere in the southern ocean while people are asleep B-). Taking something like a Hobie offshore is, of course, a rather bad idea - but you knew that already. While a catamaran has a better chance than a monohull of out-running extreme weather, it's not the wind you have to worry about - it's the waves! http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMOKQL26WD_index_0.html http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...gue_waves.html It looks like rogue waves are a lot more common than most of us have believed. While I'd be happy to sail a cat on coastal routes, I'd prefer a monohull for ocean passages. Rolling a monohull is not uncommon (I know someone who's done it). Successfully rolling a catamaran would, I imagine, be far less common! Pleasant dreams. |
#22
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![]() "jspeer" wrote in message ... Of course you could go with a catamaran, but I've never been comfortable offshore in a boat that is as stable upside-down as right-side up:-) Jim less chance of it sinking ? - unless you hole both hulls david |
#23
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![]() "Jason Keats" wrote in message ... While a catamaran has a better chance than a monohull of out-running extreme weather, it's not the wind you have to worry about - it's the waves! agree - one can always let some sheet out, reef the sails + other options to allow for the wind, but what o you do for a 30 mt wave - i remember on my second sydney to hobart (monohull) the wave height was incredibly scary - surfing is no problem and a lot of fun, but race boats were and still are constructed very lightly, coming down the other side with a huge thump hoping the rigging and the boat would stay together thats scary enjoyed ur links david |
#24
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In article , OzOne wrote:
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 11:37:05 +1000, "david" scribbled thusly: "jspeer" wrote in message ... Of course you could go with a catamaran, but I've never been comfortable offshore in a boat that is as stable upside-down as right-side up:-) Jim less chance of it sinking ? - unless you hole both hulls david and add a great big lump of lead! And, actually, a cat is more stable upside down, which is good in that you won't be in a washing machine with all sorts of things flying around. The bad news is that it's near impossible to right on your own. But, at least you'll be alive, relatively dry, and relatively comfortable. -- Jonathan Ganz (j gan z @ $ail no w.c=o=m) http://www.sailnow.com "If there's no wind, row." |
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