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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |