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Can I sail a catamaran to Richmond, VA ?
On Wed, 16 Aug 2006 19:03:21 -0400, DSK wrote:
Yeah, but they're not on the east coast... officially... And the Hudson River is where exactly? |
Can I sail a catamaran to Richmond, VA ?
Yeah, but they're not on the east coast... officially...
Wayne.B wrote: And the Hudson River is where exactly? Depends on which end you're at. Maybe the confusion arose over thinking of places on navigable water *from* the East Coast rather than *on* the east coast. DSK |
Can I sail a catamaran to Richmond, VA ?
Duh!
This is a catamaran! Tipping it to lower the masthead is not a very bright idea. Solo Thesailor wrote: wrote: The boat is about 21' wide with a bridge clearance of 56'6" but I can remove the mast if I have to. ..... For any possibility of mast-bridge problem, in this case or in future, you might be interested to check out how the Volvo Round-the-World 70-foot yachts "limbo'ed" under a bridge in Melbourne, Australia, during their stop-over with their masts intact. It was a sight to behold. Apparently they: 1) used water bags to weigh the top of the mast downward, or for some boats, 2) attached a halyard to another motor boat alongside and winched. Solo Thesailor http://sailingstoriesandtips.blogspot.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Can I sail a catamaran to Richmond, VA ?
This got me thinking about something - when a catamaran heels (or is
tipped in some way) does the masthead go up, or does it go down? A few minutes on the calculator reveals the answer (assuming I did the trig right): tipping the 50 foot mast of a boat 10, 20, and 30 degrees reduces its height by 0.76, 3, and 6.7 feet respectively. However, assuming a 20 foot beam, the center of the boat is raised 1.74, 3.4, and and 5 feet respectively. The other factor to be considered is that shifting the weight entirely to one hull will lower that hull (and the entire boat) by some amount, roughly .5 to 1.2 feet on this hypothetical cat. Thus, the answer is that tipping a cat will raise the masthead until it reaches a point somewhere between 5 and 20 degrees, depending on the geometry. BTW, the polar charts for my boat don't normally have a heel angle greater the 5 degrees, but it does go up to 8 degrees when carrying a spinnaker on a beam reach in 20 knots of true wind. Boat speed is around 17 knots. I can honestly say I have no intention of verifying these numbers, although the folks at the factory claim they have. Jeff wrote: Duh! This is a catamaran! Tipping it to lower the masthead is not a very bright idea. Solo Thesailor wrote: wrote: The boat is about 21' wide with a bridge clearance of 56'6" but I can remove the mast if I have to. ..... For any possibility of mast-bridge problem, in this case or in future, you might be interested to check out how the Volvo Round-the-World 70-foot yachts "limbo'ed" under a bridge in Melbourne, Australia, during their stop-over with their masts intact. It was a sight to behold. Apparently they: 1) used water bags to weigh the top of the mast downward, or for some boats, 2) attached a halyard to another motor boat alongside and winched. Solo Thesailor http://sailingstoriesandtips.blogspot.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Can I sail a catamaran to Richmond, VA ?
Jeff wrote: This got me thinking about something - when a catamaran heels (or is tipped in some way) does the masthead go up, or does it go down? ..... Thanks for comment, and good work (I didn't check the calculations). Apology I wasn't thinking specifically for catamarans -was just thinking of options to consider for boats in general. Cheers Solo Thesailor http://sailingstoriesandtips.blogspot.com |
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