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Bart Senior January 25th 06 04:43 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
If you were shopping for a cruising boat to circumnavigate,
and decided that you wanted a catamarran for this purpose,
what characteristics would you want it to have?

Long range implies duration without outside sources
of supplies such as food and fuel.



Joe January 25th 06 04:46 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
A cellar door.

Joe


Joe January 25th 06 04:46 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
A cellar door.

Joe


[email protected] January 25th 06 06:19 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
Hey Bart... the "Bumfuzzle" kids (Pat and Ali) have so far...
made it from Florida to Phuket, Thailand, via the Panama Canal,
aboard their Wildcat 350.

However... I think their longest sea passages don't exceed ten
(10) days.

Bill

Refer: http://www.bumfuzzle.com/


Bob Crantz January 25th 06 06:38 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
Simplicity and durability.


Amen!



Bart Senior January 25th 06 09:37 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
What about speed?

"Bob Crantz" wrote
Simplicity and durability.




Bart Senior January 25th 06 09:44 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
Interesting story on the woman eaten by a
sal****er croc.

My uncle used to take vacations in the Amazon just to
kill Crocodiles. What a great idea. Fun with a big gun!
A Weatherby 460 Magnum.

wrote in message

Refer: http://www.bumfuzzle.com/




Bob Crantz January 25th 06 10:51 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
If the speed helped you outrun storms or danger or greatly reduced the
amount of provisions needed, then yes.

Practically speaking, I don't think it matters much unless you are on either
end of the bell curve.

Amen!



"Bart Senior" .@. wrote in message ...
What about speed?

"Bob Crantz" wrote
Simplicity and durability.






Jonathan Ganz January 25th 06 10:56 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
In article et,
Bob Crantz wrote:
If the speed helped you outrun storms or danger or greatly reduced the
amount of provisions needed, then yes.

Practically speaking, I don't think it matters much unless you are on either
end of the bell curve.


It's a double-edged sword. Speed could help you outrun something, but
that begs the question as to why you would be out there if you knew
something was coming. The other way to look at it is that if you rely
on the speed difference to use a smaller weather window, you would, in
my view, negate some percentage of the speed advantage.

Seems to me that if you didn't rely on the speed factor in your
go/no-go decision, then speed would be a factor. :-)

--
Capt. JG @@
www.sailnow.com



Jonathan Ganz January 25th 06 10:58 PM

Ideal Characteristics of a long range Cruising Catamarran
 
In article et,
Bob Crantz wrote:
If the speed helped you outrun storms or danger or greatly reduced the
amount of provisions needed, then yes.

Practically speaking, I don't think it matters much unless you are on either
end of the bell curve.

Amen!



"Bart Senior" .@. wrote in message ...
What about speed?

"Bob Crantz" wrote
Simplicity and durability.


How about a definition of simplicity and durability for this situation?



--
Capt. JG @@
www.sailnow.com




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