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"Roger Long" wrote in message
... Nice looking design. I'll have to confess that you've got me thinking about whether a nesting boat would make sense. I rejected it out of hand because of lack of space to assemble on a 32 foot boat. However, if I made the forward lifelines dropable on both sides, maybe I could stick the ends out port and starboard. That still leaves the weight problem. Even getting an 8 footer on board will take some tugging or creative use of the jib halyard. BTW take a look at the boats I design in my day job he http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma On our 30' cutter we assembled our FB11 across the lifelines, actually using them to support the ends while we bolted together the middle bulkhead. 4 x 5/16" bolts, 2 below waterline and 2 near sheer with rubber washers + fender washers + wingnuts held it all together. It was very light and I usually just threw the assembled boat over the side with a big splash. Retrieval was with a halyard. I really like nesting dinghies. With practice it was a 5 minute job to assemble, most of the time was spent untying the ropes holding the two pieces down. If you need a big clunky thing for a mooring, check out my GV11 in the Power Boats section of the same website for inspiration. I've had 6 adults + 1 kid and it motored along very nicely with a 3 HP outboard. Generally this wide flat hull form is great for non-boating guests. My day job: www.ral.bc.ca My old one (more fun) www.farrdesign.com -- Evan Gatehouse you'll have to rewrite my email address to get to me ceilydh AT 3web dot net (fools the spammers) |
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