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Capt.Mooron wrote:
Heh..... here is the sailcalc comparison between a Sea Sprite 34 & the Nordica 30. I believe the Nordica 30 has a 180 PHRF. I think the telling factor lies in the displacement to LWL which places the Sea Sprite in the very heavy cruiser class at over 400. Performance Comparison LOA Sea Sprite 34 34.08 Nordica 30 29.49 LWL Sea Sprite 34 24.26 Nordica 30 25 Beam Sea Sprite 34 10.4 Nordica 30 9.77 Displacement Sea Sprite 34 13208 Nordica 30 10220 Sail Area Sea Sprite 34 535 Nordica 30 502 Capsize Ratio Sea Sprite 34 1.76 Nordica 30 1.8 Hull Speed Sea Sprite 34 6.6 Nordica 30 6.7 Sail Area to Displacement Sea Sprite 34 15.32 Nordica 30 17.06 Displacement to LWL Sea Sprite 34 413 Nordica 30 292 LWL to Beam Sea Sprite 34 2.33 Nordica 30 2.56 Motion Comfort Sea Sprite 34 32.9 Nordica 30 28.57 Pounds/Inch Sea Sprite 34 902 Nordica 30 873 "Maxprop" wrote in message I'll grant that CCA-type boats were relatively common in the 40s and 50s, but not today. She never fails to attract compliments and photographers like flies every time she's on the water. And at the dock. Her curving sheerline and aesthetic overhangs never fail to draw praise and smiles. That would be a serious mistake if you chose to race against my boat in, say, a fin keel Catalina 34 with a PHRF of 144. My boat tends to sail with C34s upwind and beats them easily off the wind or downwind. My boat placed second in her class in the Chicago-Mac. Her rating of 190 is a gift. The Nordic isn't the prettiest of the canoe stern boats, but it is better looking than, say, something with a horrendous, big-ass swim platform. Max One of the things you have to remember with designs like the Sea Sprite, is that they increase waterline length significantly as they heel and they always heel. If you increase her waterline by 2 feet the D/LWL drops to 335. 3 feet makes it 290. The Sail Calc numbers are just for upright boats. Unlike modern boat with fat asses, the older boats were meant to be sailed on their sides. The old boat I sail has a waterline length of 63 feet or so but we always sail her on her ear and the water line is up around 80+ feet. The length on deck is about 96'. Modern boats gain no WL when heeled and in fact some racers try to heel them in light airs to reduce wetted area. They are meant to be sailed flat as they lever the rudders out when heeled excessively. Note the prevalence of twin rudders lately so sleds don't wipe out as much. |
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