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![]() Thom Stewart wrote: Joe, Neal has made that statement about waves before and as usual he's full of S--t. His whole scenario is riddled with wrong stupid assumption. The first and dumbest is comparing a displacement hull with a Surf board. Can anyone that has ever been in a Sea way ever tried to control a displacement hull in near free fall on the face of a wave with a rudder? A wave that large creates a sucking action into the wave. Something he is ignoring or is completely unaware of. He assumes his hull would be on a level plane like a surf board when in reality it would be heeled badly. Badly enough that you'd could only hang on. You wouldn't be able to move. No doubt Ol Thom, a displacement hull has no chance of steering on plane. Can you just imagine "Ellen" standing in the cockpit of her Tangerine like a surfer kicking out of a 100 footer...hehehehe. Even the planing boats getting hit from astern have little chance as discovered by Hatfield from Canada. The 7880 nm Leg 4 of Around Alone from Tauranga NZ to Salvador (Brazil) round the notoriously rough Cape Horn has claimed two booms, two masts, damaged two keels caused a pitch-poling (end-over-end capsize) and forced Kiwi Graham Dalton on his Open 60 Hexagon to retire from the race entirely. The ports of Mar del Plata and Ushuaia in southern Argentina and Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands have been extremely busy receiving the yachts, effecting emergency repairs before sending the competitors on their way. Winds of around 70 knots and 40 foot high waves have been recorded and Canadian skipper Derek Hatfield (before dismasting his Open 40 Spirit of Canada) joined a long line of mariners who have been fooled by Deigo Ramirez, a small rocky archipelago 30 miles west of Cape Horn that have scared the fillings out of many sailors who have come up on the group in the middle of the night and suddenly seen the lights on the wrong side of the boat. Hatfield's pitch-poling story is pretty amazing: It was sometime mid-afternoon when the wave that had his name on it came up from behind. "I was so exhausted that I could hardly think, but when I heard the wave I knew that I was in trouble. It was not as big as some of the others, but was breaking and it made a huge roar as it approached the boat. In seconds we were falling down the face of it until the bow dug in and then we pitch-poled. The boat went straight up and then fell over sideways. I was at the back of the boat and got flung forward, and the next thing I knew I was in the water under the boat." Derek continued his story. "I heard the water gurgling and knew that I was under the boat, then all of a sudden I heard loud explosions that reverberated through the water and I knew in a instant that the mast was breaking. It was unreal. Gurgling water and huge bangs. Suddenly without the mast the boat came back upright and I was dragged back on deck." Derek is amazed and gratified by the outpouring of support he has been receiving including Emma Richards sponsor Andrew Pindar offer to fund a spare mast is starting to feel a bit confident that he might just be able to get back into the race. Read further updates on this remarkable story at: www.aroundalone.com When he make statements like that, it is because he is speaking through a "Sock-puppet" but I've read his mentality on waves before and it is DAMN STUPID AND DANGEROUS!! His "Cut the Mustard" carries a broken Boom, Which according to him, happened in a wave entering a channel. DON"T LISTEN TO HIM! I don't think he has ever Battened Down and had the let the Vessel take care of him and itself. He just doesn't know. http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT http://community.webtv.net/tassail/GOODNITE |