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![]() "Marc Onrust" wrote in message . nl... I guess most people prefer to be upside-down-but-floating compared to upright-on-the-bottom of the Atlantic. The next question though, is what are chances of such events to happen? When I cross the Atlantic (or whatever waters) I rather opt for a 1% chance to sink my monohull (and trust on my liferaft) than a 20% chance of capsizing my cat. Now, both figures are probably far from accurate, so my question is, what are chances that such things will happen? Regards, Marc www.marineyacht.com The only published figure that I have ever seen for risk was in Chris White's book- The Cruising Multihull. He quotes mortality figures from the US coastguard over a 10 year period and tries to interpret mono and multi separately. Thus, while not capsize versus sinking, it was an attempt to look at overall risk. His estimate is one death per year per 16,500 multis compared to one per year per 12,500 monos. He admits the figures are not rock solid. Overall though it points to very low and equivalent risk in either hullform. Peter HK |
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