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![]() "Sebastian Miles" wrote in message ... Many flaws on this idea from what I can see. 1) The chances of rolling over are very slim, you would need to be in very heavy weather but in any case if it does happen your boat with roll itself back up by itself due to the keel. In the case that for some reason your boat does looses its keel, there is very little the mast will do other than keep the boat sideways and not upside down(it might even make you sink faster). 2) You already have all kinds of things in your mast. Generally these are wires, tubes, bolts and many other things indented into it. The moment you inflate something in there its prolly going to pop besides just being a pain getting in the way of everything. In any case, a roll is generally so fast that I dont think much water would get into the mast so it would have similar effect anyways. 3)Theres a pretty big chance that if you do get rolled over that you will have sails up, and the increased load from the wave will snap some part of your rigging and your mast will break like a toothpic in up to 3 places(ie. if it just comes down from an upright boat it will snap on the lifelines and then on where it hits the water). It would be useless in this case and will prolly blow up since it has no where to expand to. "Joe Bleau" wrote in message ... I just finished reading all 57 posts of a msg. which appeared in February having to do with "whether or not a 45-ft. boat could survive "severe" weather or something to that effect. I was both informed and entertained by that thread--informed because there were some excellent analyses which were enlightening to me and entertained by the quality of the flames going back and forth. This might provoke another flame war but I (and others) might learn something in the process so here goes: There is a discussion going on in a list-serve group I subscribe to as to the benefit of adding bouyancy to the top of the mast through an inflatable device which would automatically deploy were the mast to become submerged in a roll over. I am fascinated by the concept and would love to have the input from some of the excellent minds iin this newsgroup who post on such matters.. Currently there is no such device being marked (but think of the commericial potential--Waste Marine could make megabucks by having them manufactured in Taiwan for $25.00 and selling them to their victims (excuse me--customers) for $2500.00. Some posters suggested something as simple as running an automatic PFD up to the top of the mast on a halyard when conditions warranted. Others suggested canister-type inflatable devices permanently mounted. Some claimed such a device would cause the mast to break. Others claim the devices would right the boat forthwith. There are elaborate calculations "proving" that the 40 or so pounds of bouyancy offered by the PFD would equal thousands of pounds in righting force. And . . . for the final word from our panel of experts. I'd rather see a line from the top of the mast rigged with pull away support attached to a rocket that has an expandable sea anchor that the boat owner could launch outboard and then reel in to right the boat. This could double as a life line to launch at overboard sailors. The line could be attached (before being rigged to the top of the mast) to the side of the boat using a seatbelt type latch that would only release if the boat were on it's side. A further latch would release the line from the mast when the mast was again perpendicular. |
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