Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
aroostifer
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.

Interested in the seaworthiness of these designs. It seems some say
they can be squirrely to steer downwind, but others say that applies
mostly to racing situations where the boats being driving hard. Have
heard all the Fastnet stories, but this boat is post-Fastnet vintage
(very early eighties I believe, but may be very late seventies.)

Former owner did the Baja HAHA and Bash. My immediate crusing plans
would be SF Bay, Mexico, Hawaii, and eventually the wild blue yonder.
Would love to circumnavigate the Pacific.

Thoughts, opinions, slander, or wild conjecture about the suitability
of such a boat for bluewater cruising?

Thanks,

- Ari

  #2   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Capt. JG
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

"aroostifer" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.

Interested in the seaworthiness of these designs. It seems some say
they can be squirrely to steer downwind, but others say that applies
mostly to racing situations where the boats being driving hard. Have
heard all the Fastnet stories, but this boat is post-Fastnet vintage
(very early eighties I believe, but may be very late seventies.)

Former owner did the Baja HAHA and Bash. My immediate crusing plans
would be SF Bay, Mexico, Hawaii, and eventually the wild blue yonder.
Would love to circumnavigate the Pacific.

Thoughts, opinions, slander, or wild conjecture about the suitability
of such a boat for bluewater cruising?

Thanks,

- Ari


I looked at that boat also. I'm not that familiar with the Choate, but it
seemed quite solid. It didn't seem very comfortable below, but I suppose
that's fixable. I recall that there were problems with water damage of cabin
sole... some kind of water damage, and it would be wise to figure out why.
Also, the owner (nice guy) told me that the cracks in the portlights seem to
keep coming back. Sure seems like it could be due to excessive flexing.
Maybe that's minor and expected or not. Damn big wheel. Nice hardware.. nice
looking standing rigging. My biggest complaint was the chopped up interior.

If you want to chat, drop me an email.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com



  #3   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Capt. JG
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

"DSK" wrote in message
. ..
aroostifer wrote:
I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.

Interested in the seaworthiness of these designs. It seems some say
they can be squirrely to steer downwind, but others say that applies
mostly to racing situations where the boats being driving hard. Have
heard all the Fastnet stories, but this boat is post-Fastnet vintage
(very early eighties I believe, but may be very late seventies.)


In that case, it's unlikely to be a full-fledged broach coach. The mid-70s
designs with the high pinched transoms were the worst for that.

The worst characteristic of the IOR broach-coaches was their handling in
following seas, doesn't really seem to matter how hard they're being
driven. OTOH the flip side is that on any course above a broad reach, they
steer like they're on rails. Sweet.


Former owner did the Baja HAHA and Bash. My immediate crusing plans
would be SF Bay, Mexico, Hawaii, and eventually the wild blue yonder.
Would love to circumnavigate the Pacific.

Thoughts, opinions, slander, or wild conjecture about the suitability
of such a boat for bluewater cruising?


Take a good hard look at the rig. These boats were designed to be sailed
by a large, strong, skilled crew. It may be that this one can be fairly
easily set up to be handled by a smaller crew, or that some steps in
re-rigging have already been taken.

Hope this helps.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King


From what I saw, it was set up nicely to be handled by two people.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com



  #4   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Jim
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

aroostifer wrote:

I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.

Interested in the seaworthiness of these designs. It seems some say
they can be squirrely to steer downwind, but others say that applies
mostly to racing situations where the boats being driving hard. Have
heard all the Fastnet stories, but this boat is post-Fastnet vintage
(very early eighties I believe, but may be very late seventies.)

Former owner did the Baja HAHA and Bash. My immediate crusing plans
would be SF Bay, Mexico, Hawaii, and eventually the wild blue yonder.
Would love to circumnavigate the Pacific.

Thoughts, opinions, slander, or wild conjecture about the suitability
of such a boat for bluewater cruising?

Thanks,

- Ari

I did some long distance racing on one 20 years ago, and delivered it
back, better than 1,000 miles each time. We saw some really bad stuff
many times. Maybe 5,000 miles total on that boat.

Well built, fairly comfortable. Lots of usable room inside. Good sea
bunks. Not the ultimate design for cruising, but not bad.

The worst I remember was 70 knots off Southern Baja. The boat did very
well.

Very economical delivering it up the Baja bash. Something like a quart
an hour at 6 knots. My memory isn't perfect.

You could make a far worse choice.

A better choice might be a pilot house, like a Cal 35.

  #5   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

I finished a similar trip last year on a Swan 38, down the west coast
from Seattle, the HAHA, 7 months in Mexico, then Hawaii and back to
Portland.
I heard a lot of people say they were susceptible to broach, not
good in following seas and not good for a Monitor wind vane. My
experience was very different, we had 30kt off cape Mendocino, and
pretty big waves, it seamed to handle great and the wind vane was no
problem. I had my family with me and never put of the tri-radial or the
cruising spinnaker up in anything over 25kt. So pushing it in high
winds and seas may have had different results. In light winds coming
over the Pacific high, we left the asymmetrical up for 48 hours with
the monitor, and it handled great.
I think its great to cruise in a boat with good sailing
characteristics, and that design was great. It was not so comfortable
for reading in the cockpit, and if our friend were in a Halberg Rassy,
were more likely to hang out on their boat. But compared to the price
of most cruising boats, it seems like a great way to go.

John



  #6   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Paul Cassel
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

aroostifer wrote:
I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.

Interested in the seaworthiness of these designs. It seems some say
they can be squirrely to steer downwind, but others say that applies
mostly to racing situations where the boats being driving hard. Have
heard all the Fastnet stories, but this boat is post-Fastnet vintage
(very early eighties I believe, but may be very late seventies.)

Former owner did the Baja HAHA and Bash. My immediate crusing plans
would be SF Bay, Mexico, Hawaii, and eventually the wild blue yonder.
Would love to circumnavigate the Pacific.

Thoughts, opinions, slander, or wild conjecture about the suitability
of such a boat for bluewater cruising?

It's a 1979, apparently. Former racers make indifferent offshore boats
due to their lack of capacity to sail well heavily loaded. I admit the
concept of skimming along at 8 kts in a light breeze while other boats
drudge along barely moving is attractive. However, a water capacity of
50 gallons is thin for moving 'beyond'. I may be wrong here, but I think
if you loaded this boat up with what most folks take to hit the south
pacific, it'd sail terribly.

There is a reason offshore types gravitate to heavy boats. They're not
stupid.
  #7   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Lew Hodgett
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

aroostifer wrote:

I'm interested in a Choate 41 (2 ton IOR) for sale in the Bay Area. My
interest is NOT in racing but rather in long-distance cruising.


Dennis builds race boats, not cruising boats.

BTW, his yard is in the neighborhood and always seems to be busy.

Lew

  #8   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Wayne.B
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 08:20:11 -0600, Paul Cassel
wrote:

However, a water capacity of
50 gallons is thin for moving 'beyond'. I may be wrong here, but I think
if you loaded this boat up with what most folks take to hit the south
pacific, it'd sail terribly.


Those are good points. Another thing to consider is that virtually
all racing boats are designed to sail with a lot of crew weight on the
rail (movable ballast). Without that extra stability, most if not all
will have trouble carrying full sail in any kind of breeze, and will
lack power going to windward.

  #9   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

Paul Cassel wrote:
However, a water capacity of
50 gallons is thin for moving 'beyond'.


Is it impossible to put in a bigger tank? For potable water,
bladder tanks work fine.

... I may be wrong here, but I think
if you loaded this boat up with what most folks take to hit the south
pacific, it'd sail terribly.



Why?

Wayne.B wrote:
Those are good points. Another thing to consider is that virtually
all racing boats are designed to sail with a lot of crew weight on the
rail (movable ballast). Without that extra stability, most if not all
will have trouble carrying full sail in any kind of breeze, and will
lack power going to windward.


If true, that is a good point. But it's still quite possible
that the boat will develop enough power to sail to windward
quite capably and better than at least 75% of "cruising"
boats. A lot of older racing boats have had improved bulb
keels added, which makes a huge difference.

One thing to bear in mind is that racing boats are generally
designed to be easily driven and to steer relatively well
while driving hard. They will sail effectively under
shortened sail and the more efficient rig is less work.

The other strikes me as foozling around on the edge of
almost-logic, looking hard for an excuse to dislike
something you already hate. Why would Boat X, much faster
than Boat Y when both are in normal sailing trim, suddenly
become much slower than Boat Y when both are heavily loaded?

It seems more sensible to me that a light, strongly built
boat with a fast hull, would carry loads much better than a
boxy hull that was heavier to begin with.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

  #10   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.cruising
Wayne.B
 
Posts: n/a
Default choate 41 for cruising

On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 22:57:30 -0400, DSK wrote:

It seems more sensible to me that a light, strongly built
boat with a fast hull, would carry loads much better than a
boxy hull that was heavier to begin with.


It really boils down to what is the impact of your cruising gear on a
light displacement boat vs heavy displacement. Let's for the sake of
argument say that you've got 4,000 lbs of cruising "stuff", e.g.,
extra water, extra fuel, larger batteries, extra anchors, chain,
windlass, solar panels, cruising canvas, food, refrigeration, tools,
spares, dinghy, motor, etc, etc.

On a 10,000 lb boat, that is a 40% increase, a considerable amount
which will no doubt adversely affect performance.

Same gear on a 20,000 lb boat is only a 20% increase.

Assuming both were the same speed to begin with, the lighter boat will
be more severely impacted.

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:19 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017