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-   -   Sail Report-35s5 meets it's match! (https://www.boatbanter.com/asa/71825-sail-report-35s5-meets-its-match.html)

Joe July 21st 06 02:05 PM

sell at a silly-high price~ a 35s5 What?
 

Rob wrote:
She continues to sell at a silly-high
price. She continues to win races....more than I can find for the C&C99
and Express 30 & 35 combined.



I thought you bought it because it was a cheap boat. I delivered a C&C
121 last night across the bay and up the ship channel. That boat is
only 4&1/2 ft longer than the 35s5 but will cost many times what the
35s5 will cost you. Must be the cardboard bulkheads and stick on shelf
liner , and 8 ft of wasted space that keeps the price down on your boat

Joe




RB
35s5
NY



Capt. Rob July 21st 06 02:19 PM

sell at a silly-high price~ a 35s5 What?
 

That boat is
only 4&1/2 ft longer than the 35s5 but will cost many times what the
35s5 will cost you. Must be the cardboard bulkheads and stick on shelf
liner , and 8 ft of wasted space that keeps the price down on your boat




Golly...not sure which is funnier....that Joe thinks 4.5 feet is "only"
a little bit bigger or that the 121 is 15 years newer!!! I really love
my 8 foot long swim platform as well!!!!
Good work there, Joe. You're a real sailing slueth!

RB
35s5
NY


Scotty July 21st 06 04:55 PM

Jeff lost worse than Howard the Duck!
 

--
"Swab Rob" wrote

Such bull!!!! We have a lot of serious cruisers here. I

speak with many
of them.


as you're pumping out their holding tanks?



Scotty July 21st 06 05:00 PM

Jeff lost worse than Howard the Duck!
 


--
"Swab Rob" wrote

Even my nice looking 35s5 is FAR
too Starship Enterprise to be anywhere near as attractive.

Even a
Mac26x looks nicer.



I'd say it's a toss up.


--
Scotty
''One who never gets out of the Sound cannot, with
any degree of credibility, comment on the courage
of fellow sailors'' ....F.B.







Its not often that anyone will tell a boat owner that

their boat
really sucks. You have to rely on your real friends like

us for that
kind of tough love.

LOL! Yeah...the same people who bashed the C&C 32 and

Pearson 30....to
boats that are still superior to most on this NG. Who here

has sailed a
35s5? Oh, that's right. No one! Why not read the reviews?

She did win
boat of the year in 3 countries. She continues to sell at

a silly-high
price. She continues to win races....more than I can find

for the C&C99
and Express 30 & 35 combined.


You could look at the "Motion Comfort Factor" of your

boat. Its hard
to find one with a lower rating that isn't billed as a

racing boat.
On the other hand, lots of boats will be a lot more

comfortable in
stronger air, and they move along just fine.


Now that's an interesting topic. I did, in fact, look at

the MC rating
at sailcalc and wondered about it. But I did sail the 35s5

three times
and once in very gusty conditions with 4-5 foot swells in

Florida. I
just didn't note anything "uncomfortable" compared to the

C&C or
Pearson which heeled more, took more spray and didn't

track as well. On
the other hand, I have no doubt that in some serious seas,

the 35s5
will be a washing machine. But we bought her for use on

the LIS where
conditions are generally easy to deal with even on the

rougher side of
the spectrum.


Of course, if you only measure performance as "pointing

ability" and
comfort as having a 7 foot bunk that needs A/C so as to be

not
"horrific," then maybe yours is the best.

We like the AC and if a boat has no room for stretching

out and
vigorous sex I don't want it even for short cruising. I'm

43 not 63. My
wife is 38.


The average age of the users group is certainly brought

up by the
retirees, but there are plenty of owners in their early

50's and some
younger.

I wasn't trolling with the age comment. The design appeals

to the older
set who are finding a monhull more trying than salty and

romantic and I
do respect that.

Clearly since the used price of any but the cheapest

cats is
over $120K, this is not for young kids just starting out.

Further,
for daysailing, there are better multihull rides than a

cruising cat -
maybe a F28.

We have a few F28's here and they look like fun. They can

even be
cruised. I've actually toyed with the idea of getting one

after a few
years...but then I'm also toying with the idea of a Menger

23 Catboat
and Alerion 28.


what's up with hatches into the cockpit? I can

understand why
sleeping in your aft cabin is "horrific" even on a

mooring.

There are no hatches into the cockpit, Jeff. They are

ports...and only
one. The other opens to the portside. We've found that

with both open
on the hook we get a nice breeze. Oddly, with the door

closed the
breeze is almost a wind. A design of luck I think, but

it's nice if the
breeze is not hot.

While traveling for a year there were only a few nights

when I
started
thinking A/C might be nice, but a wind chute actually does

work for
creating a healthy breeze (assuming you have an overhead

hatch, which
you don't).

It's funny. The only people I know who aren't happy with

their A/C are
the ones who don't have it. Sure, you can get a breeze

going, but when
it's 90 degrees that can really suck at times. You may be

used to it
and tolerating it, but having A/C is simply nice...just

like having a
fridge on board instead of a mere icebox or a real shower

stall (Which
I don't have) over a sit down shower. When people buy a

boat with these
"non-essentials" they suddenly get a sheepish grin about

them. A/C is
nice and worth the money.

I spent 3 hours mid-day doing plumbing and carpentry

in
the head. Yes, it was hot but I just stepped into the

shower for a
quick rinse to "test my work."

I wonder if your realize how unhealthy it is (especially

at your age)
to risk superheating your body like that. It can be

equally dangerous
for small children.

You talk like your boat is

superior because it was designed for A/C. I claim its

inferior
because it needs A/C.


Sorry, but unless your interior can drop to 75 degrees on

a 90 degree
day without A/C you need it. Like the C&C we note that the

interior of
the 35s5 is generally cooler than outside heat, but it's

still not 75!
And niether is your cat.


The quote I got (from the high end guys who travel from

RI) was
$4-5K,
more if I wanted to chill all of the cabins all of the

time.

Uh, why wouldn't you do the job right and cool the whole

boat? The two
zone a/c on hour boat was & installed for 5800.00 (PO paid

for it).
It's 19'500 BTU and also heats the boat. It has a nice

computer control
which monitors humidity and temp...nice. I think you're

wrong about how
much nicer it would make the boat and 400 bucks extra?

That's not a lot
and I really seriously think your vastly underestimating

how much use
the A/C would get used once you have.

Oddly, We've had almost no mildew, virtually none in

the living
areas.
Must be the good ventilation.


You can't see a wide variety of molds and other germ

breeding areas on
your boat. Step aboard a boat with climate control and the

first thing
always noticed is how clean and nice it smells.



RB
35s5
NY




Scotty July 21st 06 05:07 PM

Jeff lost worse than Howard the Duck!
 

--
"Swab Rob" wrote
Uh, why wouldn't you do the job right and cool the whole

boat? The two
zone a/c on hour boat was & installed for 5800.00 (PO paid

for it).
It's 19'500 BTU and also heats the boat. It has a nice

computer control
which monitors humidity and temp...nice. I think you're

wrong about how
much nicer it would make the boat and 400 bucks extra?

That's not a lot
and I really seriously think your vastly underestimating

how much use
the A/C would get used once you have.



Why does the term ''dock condo'' keep popping into my head?


--
Scotty
''One who never gets out of the Sound cannot, with
any degree of credibility, comment on the courage
of fellow sailors'' ....F.B.




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