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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 11:59:17 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: wrote in message .. . As an aside, the first Farr 40 my wife saw didn't impress her one little bit. No back on the cockpit and a stupid little one burner stove? Women are the primary reason why so many sailboats today are such poor excuses as boats. The little woman does not have any idea about what things should take priority. About the difference between a good boat and a poor boat. To women a big apartment-size galley is a must have. And a big bathroom with hot shower and vanity and lots of lights for putting on make-up. Also a very large dinette is a must so she can cook and entertain. And a refrigerator/freezer (stand up, of course). Never mind the boat won't sail. Never mind the cockpit's impossible large. Never mind the tankage puts the boat well below her lines. Never mind you can't get to the motor because kitchen cabinets are built all around it. Never mind you have to ship two thousand pounds of batteries and inverters to run her blow dryer, clothes dryer, and microwave. Never mind all those large dangerous windows she's just got to have so it looks like a house from inside. Nope, just built a boat like a floating apartment and the women will say. "That's the one I want." You know what's really more disgraceful than this? It's the man who knows he's buying a piece of crap but does it anyway just to please the little woman. Wilbur Hubbard Willie, you know so little about boats that it is very difficult to discuss them with you. I mentioned in my post that this was a Farr 40, which is one of the most successful boats that have ever been designed, It is an all out racing boat. It has an open cockpit, nearly a third of the length of the boat to give the helmsman and rope handlers plenty of room. It has a small galley because these people are racing, not eating gourmet meals and extra equipment makes the boat weigh more. There are large areas of the deck where carbon fiber is used and they don't paint these areas -- to save weight. The running back stays have the cover stripped off the kevlar core from just above the height that a crew member can reach up to the mast because the cover has weight that isn't needed and as one of the crew said, "that cover missing up there is equal to one more man sitting on the rail. Their battery bank is just large enough to keep the nav lights and instruments going for the length of the race. The tanks are as small as possible and in the better crewed boats the length of the race X an adequate amount of water per man per day is all that is carried. The better crews also weigh each man's gear before they bring it aboard and if you are over weight you take out enough to get the load down to the limit - say, 5 pounds - or they don't load your bag. But then, as Malcolm Forbes said, "The dumbest people I know are those who know it all." You must have some rather odd fetishes as you seem to like to put your foot in your mouth so much. Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom) |