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![]() "Commodore Joe Redcloud" wrote in message ... On Thu, 01 Dec 2005 23:21:09 GMT, "Maxprop" wrote: "Capt.Mooron" wrote in message news:1%Cjf.182723$Io.55440@clgrps13... 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. All true, but don't forget who designed the SS34: Bill Luders. I don't expect you to know much about him, but he was known as the quintessential rule-beater during his naval architecture days. He designed Americas Cup boats as well as racers of virtually every length and application. And his boats won easily over boats that were purportedly "much faster yachts." He often talked to the rating rule powers-that-be, informing them of loopholes in their rules. They would say, "Go away, Bill--we like the rule as it is." So he'd design a boat to exploit that loophole and beat all their cherished rule-optimized yachts. This was through the CCA period, but also included the early years of the IOR. The SS34 has a high rating and rates like a floating concrete barge on paper *because* of her short waterline. But her waterline increases dramatically when heeled, and its shortness is a distinct advantage for minimizing wetted surface area off the wind. That's why the boat sails well above her rating. In fleets where SS34s are raced regularly against other boats, the PHRF is almost always modified to around 145 in order to allow the other boats to win. Seriously. But there are only 46 of them in existence, so they aren't exactly overrepresented in racing fleets around the country. What I do know is this: we can easily sail to weather, both in pointing ability and boat speed, with a Catalina 34, and are quite a bit faster to weather than a Pearson 33. We sail almost exactly knot for knot with a Tartan 34 with a keel/CB and a competent skipper (much experience against that boat and crew). We can't keep up with a Catalina 36 or most larger boats to weather. Off the wind we can sail with boats that should be quite a bit faster, and that's wing and wing. With main and our asymmetric spinnaker we leave them behind. This boat sails consistently at half the wind speed in anything over 5kts. up to about 14kts. Then it holds in around 6.5 to 7kts. unless surfing. All those speeds are confirmed via GPS, by the way. I'll tell you what I've told Bubbles: don't always presume that what you see on paper has anything to do with reality. I'm sorry to say that your boat probably can't stay with a SS34 on any point of sail. Don't take my word for this--read all about the Luders 34 in Ferenc Mate's book, Best Boats. I like your boat, by the way. Looks like a great cruiser in the photos. Max The SeaSprite 34 was such a great performer that demand was overwhelming. After making less than 50 boats, they had to stop production due to enormous stress! I don't normally respond to this blathering idiot, but he's so full of it on this point that some info needs clarification. The SS34 was built by one Clark Ryder of C. E. Ryder yachts, a semi-custom firm in Bristol, RI. Clark built boats until he was driven out of business by the ill-conceived luxury tax on boats over $100K. The SS34, and its sisterships, the double-ended Southern Cross cruisers, were expensive boats, built not for the masses, but on a semi-custom basis. They were too expensive to compete with the mass-produced boats of the time, but did well in sales with people who wanted quality boats and were willing to pay for them. At least until the luxury tax sank the business, and many others simultaneously. Meanwhile, if you want essentially the looks of a 60's cruiser in a boat with at least moderate performance, you can look at a Robinhood 36, which is what the deadseasprite wishes it could have been. I'm sure you're clueless (you generally are) as to what a Robinhood 36 is, so I'll fill you in. It's nothing more than a Cape Dory 36 bearing the name of the yard that now builds the design. It's a great boat, fast, and very similar in performance to the SS34. The Cape Dorys and subsequent Robinhoods appealed to essentially the same potential buyers as the Sea Sprite series of boats did in their day. The Seasprite was not a successful design by any measure. Tom Morris has only sold a handful of Morris 36s. Does that mean it's not a successful design as well? How about Steve and Linda Dashew's Deerfoot and Sundeer boats--only a handful of them are in existence. Are they equally unsuccessful? By your reasoning (really an inappropriate term for the Redclod) the Ferrari Enzo is also a failure, so few of them exist. Your Hunter/Chevy Cavalier mentality isn't equipped for understanding such vessels and vehicles. Max |
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