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sherwindu wrote:
Ian George wrote: In general, apart from the nut-swinging hard core racer, a multi will be reefed well before a similar sized mono - simply because the multihull sailor reefs to gust-speed, whereas the mono sailor will as a rule reef to average wind speed and point-up or heel over to spill the gusts. I think you are trying to give some credit to multi-hull sailors over mono hull sailors where it doesn't exist. What you describe is just plain good sailing technique, for any boat. However, as I stated earlier, a boat heeling over is a much more positive feedback than an increase of speed. A monohull will usually do a gradual heeling or at least it is obvious that you may be in trouble if your rail is in the water. A multihull, on the other hand, will probably stay flat until the tipping force overcomes the moment arm of the upwind pontoon, and the multi will go over rather quickly. I'm curious what criteria a multi sailor uses to relate boat speed to the amount of reefing required. Speed is not that easy to judge, and a dangerous speed may be dependent on the particular construction of the multi. Not so much in a cruising multi; in a highly strung racing multi very close attention needs to be paid to true -v- apparent wind, but as close atention to velocity made good is also important when racing, usually there is close attention being paid to that formula. In a cruising cat or tri, it is usually sufficient to be aware of apparent wind when running off the wind, where one could be doing 15 knots or better, running off a 25knot breeze, in the apparent calm of a mild 10kt apparent wind in the cockpit. Trousers can be ruptured when turning to head back up and the wind turns into 30 - 40kts apparent... drogue time, hopefully you aren't out of sea room. Ah, that is my point. All of the issues you have raised in this thread - bad design, poor seamanship, inappropriate precaution, poor construction - all apply equally to both types of craft. They can't possibly be used to argue a case for one type over the other. My issue is not so much preventing the initial roll over, but what happens to the boat once that happens. Not that it is exactly pertinent to multihulls, but the news today talked about two women rowing their boat across the Atlantic and having it flip over. Luckily, they had an EPIRB, called for help, and luckily their was a Tall Ship in the vicinity that picked them up rather quickly as they clung to their overturned hull. Rolling a modern, well-found cruising multi is very, very hard to do. That was all I was trying to point out. Older (up to th '70s) solid deck tris and cats were somewhat more prone to this, due to the action of green water on a solid expanse of deck. Some coastal cats and tri's I see with close weave tramp mesh bother me too, although the chances are that the tramps would be ripped from their saddles before the boat would roll. but really, the OP wasn't talking about these boats. Frankly taking to the Ocean in a rowboat isn't even halfway sane. Offshore to me is 200miles. I don't know if that is enough of a cushion if the seaworthyness of any boat is in question. If the seaworthiness of the boat or for that matter the competence of the people aboard it is in question, I am perfectly happy to watch it leave from the dock, and have done. Ian |
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