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#1
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Hello all, I am considering building a biggish boat around 20-30' and would
this be suitable to go from tumby bay to adelaide for example. I want to feel safe and secure in it and be able to comftably handly rough water so im not bobbing around, any ideas, i think that the hull will be made from metal plate about 1/8" thick. i know it will be heavy but. It will also be used in the river murray. I wont be building it for a while but would like to start making plans. |
#2
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Fantastic questions. I say "questions" in the plural because I see at least
two issues: i) what type of boat, and ii) why would you want to build one rather than buy as good used one? I haven't built a boat but I understand it's an enormous project usually requiring about three times longer than budgeted, and much more money, and then inevitably you end up very soon wishing you had done things a little differently, in ways that you couldn't have known until you boated in it for a few seasons. I hear that a typical building time for a committed amateur builder, constructing something in the 30 foot range, while gainfully employed in some other occupation and wishing to spend some time with his friends and family, is about ten years. The first question sounds like you're not an experienced boater. (Correct if in error.) Start small and work up. Boat with friends, crew for people, get a small second-hand boat and use it a lot, fix it up a bit. Absolutely take a few introductory boating courses. Boating safely requires knowledge, experience, and a personal commitment to doing it intelligently. It needs to be taken seriously. Off-shore cruising is dangerous - period. Not for neophytes, and the fact that many of them have tempted fate and got away with it does not justify their actions. Ever boat is a compromise. Large and/or heavy ones will be more seaworthy, although there are many other factors than size. Small and/or light ones will be easier to maintain and handle, and require fewer crew (many other factors...). At the moment, I need a bigger, heavier boat - and a smaller, lighter boat! It varies day to day. I'm on boat number four and still haven't got it quite right yet (although very happy), and have spent a great deal of time this Spring cleaning and repairing, and not keeping up with many other very important other parts of my life. Charles ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Matthew Ryan" wrote in message ... Hello all, I am considering building a biggish boat around 20-30' and would this be suitable to go from tumby bay to adelaide for example. I want to feel safe and secure in it and be able to comftably handly rough water so im not bobbing around, any ideas, i think that the hull will be made from metal plate about 1/8" thick. i know it will be heavy but. It will also be used in the river murray. I wont be building it for a while but would like to start making plans. |
#3
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Matthew,
Don't just look at length, look at displacement. It makes a huge difference in all sorts of ways. I crew on a J30 and own a Quoddy Pilot Sloop. One was designed for racing in the 1970s the other for carrying sardines to market in the 1850s. They are the same length, the same beam and have close to the same sail area. The J30 weighs 6,000lb and the Quoddy wieghs 18,000lb. Its a world of difference. Also my sailing situation underscores the point that no one boat is ever the "right" boat all the time. (Except certain Herreshoff's) Get out and go sailing. Good luck, Tom Hunter "Matthew Ryan" wrote in message ... Hello all, I am considering building a biggish boat around 20-30' and would this be suitable to go from tumby bay to adelaide for example. I want to feel safe and secure in it and be able to comftably handly rough water so im not bobbing around, any ideas, i think that the hull will be made from metal plate about 1/8" thick. i know it will be heavy but. It will also be used in the river murray. I wont be building it for a while but would like to start making plans. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.698 / Virus Database: 455 - Release Date: 6/2/04 |
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