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Maxprop wrote:
.... quite often boats of beauty are great performers as well. Conversely ugly boats--those that have been optimized for interior volume rather than hull design integrity--are most often terrible performers. Take the Morgan Out Island series, as an example of the latter. Or most (not all) center cockpit boats. ... And the CCA yachts of the 40s and 50s as an example of the former. The Hinckley Bermuda 40 is still one of the finest performing, best handling boats in existence. It still wins handicap races, and it's drop dead gorgeous. So are the 6 Metres and Etchells 22s. Even the latest America's Cup yachts are beautiful in design and appearance. Dame Ellen MacArthur's B&Q, while quite modern in design, is quite attractive. Any boat that wins is pretty. The more she wins, the prettier she gets! L.Francis Herreshoff wrote that the sea may be considered to have an eye for beauty, that hulls which just 'look right,' especially to an experienced sailor, often are the best. It's true that computational dynamics have replaced the experienced eye in naval architecture, and boats have become enormously faster (largely because of advances in materials IMHO), the experienced sailors eye still has a feel for what the sea will approve of. Ugly race boats are usually optimized to some measurement rule rather than for performance. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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