Remember Me?
Menu
Home
Search
Today's Posts
Home
Search
Today's Posts
BoatBanter.com
»
rec.boats
»
Boat Building
>
Flying Pig Damage Assessment and update
Reply
LinkBack
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Display Modes
#
1
posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
KLC Lewis
external usenet poster
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,579
Flying Pig Damage Assessment and update
"Charlie Morgan" wrote in message
news
On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 17:51:44 -0500,
(Paul) wrote:
In article , "KLC Lewis"
wrote:
So now the question becomes, can you ever make it strong enough
without that access?
How could you ever know how strong it was?
You'll never reach 100% new as-built strength. But even if you did by some
chance, you'll never be able to KNOW exactly how strong the repair is.
You'll have to take her out in progressivly more stressful conditions and
each time there will be that knot in your gut. Will it take 5' seas? 6'
seas? 7' seas pounding for day after day? Even if it does, you'll not
know if the next wave will be the one. You'll crawl around in the bildge
after each short trip looking for problems that really can't be seen.
This is not what the dream was about.
No, it will never be a Morgan again. Not so that you can trust her just
because there is a long history of Morgans that are built just like her
that have proven themselves countless times. That was why you bought a
Morgan in the first place. The confidence that she'll be able to handle
anything the sea throws at her. That's gone for good now. There will
always be a nagging doubt. You'll live in fear of every new set of
conditions, only trusting her if conditions are just perfect, and they
never are. Over time your love for her will turn to hate just from this
nagging mistrust. You'll find more and more excuses to leave her at the
dock. Afraid each and every time you leave a port.
No, even a horse you dearly love should be put down when the time comes.
Do it swiftly and without regrets.
Good luck,
Paul
Sorry, but that's just plain ignorance talking. The boat could be repaired
to be
stronger than original. I rarely "repair" anything on a boat without
making it
better than it ever was.
CWM
Yup, gotta agree with Charlie.
Reply With Quote
Reply
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Show Printable Version
Search this Thread
:
Advanced Search
Display Modes
Switch to Linear Mode
Hybrid Mode
Switch to Threaded Mode
Posting Rules
Smilies
are
On
[IMG]
code is
Off
HTML code is
Off
Trackbacks
are
On
Pingbacks
are
On
Refbacks
are
On
All times are GMT +1. The time now is
10:01 AM
.
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
Contact Us
BoatBanter Home
Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2017
LinkBack
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks