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Sure..... when hove to in extreme conditions I find that its ususlly
better to heave-to more 'on' the main than on a jib ... so that the boat slowly backs down and stays with its turbulence slick (caused by slipping the keel... such turbulence in the water will cause a brteaking wave to actually break long before it gets to the boat. My issue with stern hung rudders is that when running off in heavy seas is that they take a pounding from stern boarding waves. Its all in the 'geometry' of the attachment making the rudder very vulnerble to huge generated forces simply by 'trigonometry'. In article , Dave wrote: On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 01:46:45 GMT, Rich Hampel said: are very vulnerable to breakage if the boat slips backwards such as when hove-to Could you explicate? I don't recall ever slipping backwards while hove to. General a very slow forward motion. Were you thinking of a situation where you've got large waves at right angles to the wind direction? |