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On Tue, 08 Jan 2008 18:55:46 -0800, Jim wrote:
Wow, hull speed into 25 knots of wind. That's a lot of power. Of course it isn't. Remember, power required varies with the cube of the speed, and hull speed just isn't fast. I figure maybe 100 HP for a thirty foot boat. Maybe less. It's the fifteen horse motors I object to. Battleships won't do hull speed on 1 to 4 HP per ton either. I am guessing you can get three times what is average, for not too much space and weight. It would be impossible to power at hull speed into a 25 knot wind, and the seas that much wind kicks up. Of course it is possible, it just takes sufficient power. You can get 500 HP out of a ton or so of diesel machinery. Many modern engines, Yanmars for example, put out more than one HP per cubic inch. It is certainly possible and the fact that most boats won't do it is rather the point of my post. I figure you can live with a ten percent mileage penalty with the bigger motor. If there is enough room for large waves to kick up, you can generally sail. I had in mind up a narrow river channel against wind, current, and tide. Places like the inside passage to Alaska, more motor might be handy. I have done lots of sailing, not cruising, in more than 25 MPH of wind and 2 to 3 foot waves. I used to launch a Sunfish off the beach into a 25 MPH wind. You waded out to where the water was deep enough to lower the daggerboard. And on the return I would just run it in with the board out. The rudder would kick up like a centerboard. Sometimes got it up three or so feet past the waters edge, if I timed a wave just right. Same lake had some 25 MPH sailboats: scows. |
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