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Optimum boat size for singlehandling
now, billie bob, that wasn't a nice thing to say. Did I insult the size of
your pee-pee? That was not my intention. I was merely saying that a total electric boat only works as long as he total electrics work. billie bob, very nearly ALL the crewing positions I have been on or have been offered were for boats over 40 feet in length. Why? Well on one a boat nearly 50 feet, it took two of us (both strong, and both in good physical condition) ten minutes or more to crank up the mainsail (even then it was a two-part halyard to make the effort doable), with me cranking until I got tired, then the other guy cranking until he got tired, then me cranking until Igot tired, then he cranking and maybe me cranking again. That was the main sail. As usual, you are an idiot. BB (JAXAshby) wrote: no bb, a larger boat takes more effort unless every last thing is electric, and then only until the electric stuff breaks. Put all that electric stuff on a boat and you no longer have a sailboat, you have a motorboat with sticks, and typically a LARGE motorboat with sticks, what with all the 200 amp alternators, 800 amps of batteries, a large wind generator, a large genset, 300 watts of solar power, a fifty pound windlass, 500 pounds of anchor chain on two 50 pound anchors, 150# of dinghy davits, 50# of jib/staysail furling, 40# of mainsail furling, 50# of electric winches on each side of the cockpit, and 1,500# of extra diesel fuel to run all that that stuff plus motor more often because the boat is way down on its lines. Pile all the electric stuff on a boat under 50 feet, let alone under 40 feet, and you might as well buy a trawler and get a full size refridgerator to go with it. As usual, you are an idiot. BB Bigger boats, properly equipped, often require less physical ability to manage. You won't find a 30 foot boat with hydraulic winches, roller main, and other assistive equipment very often. BB Hi all, A friend singlehands his boat, a 64 footer, ex-rescue boat, and he is 62 years old. He just brought it down from Seattle to San Diego and moves it around the bay by himself. He has had it for about 7 years. It has almost no equipment upgrades to help. Another friend brought his boat down from Vancouver and sail Mexico for the season. It is a newer schooner, has every gadget to help but it still 67 feet on deck and 74 feet overall. And another person (not really a friend but a good sailor) sails his 62 footer all over the place by himself including multiple trips to the South Pacific and does it well when he is sober. I have watched him bring his boat into the slip with 10 knots of wind on his beam blowing him toward his slipmate and never appear to be out of control. Each of the three above can singlehandly take their boat off a mooring or out of a dock, spend the day sailing the bay, and return to the mooring or dock without help. Each of them have made passages long and short without crew. . I singlehand my boat, a 46 footer. I have upgraded my equipment to help and have everything ran to the cockpit. I have roller furling on jib and main. Electric primary winches. And I am looking into the Hoyt jib boom with a staysail/sayer rig to ease the work a bit more. With this boat the longest I have been a sea is about 24 hours, a nasty jaunt against wind and waves. The ride was easier than my smaller boat, and I have no reason to expect any more trouble with singlehanding this boat than a 30 footer. Mike |
Optimum boat size for singlehandling
12 inches, bb? about 4 strokes?
seems so. now, go back to your dreams of getting laid by a 20 year old girl because you own a 48 foot boat and your belly is too big to crank in a mainsail without an electric winch. geesh, dude. take up exercise and loss that belly. Then you won't have to be considering a boat that if the electrics break when you are at sea and and 28 knots winds come along might kill you. Or buy a Corvette, a gold Rolex and aligator shoes and go trolling for chickies. Thanks for positively re-confirming that you are an idiot. BB now, billie bob, that wasn't a nice thing to say. Did I insult the size of your pee-pee? That was not my intention. I was merely saying that a total electric boat only works as long as he total electrics work. billie bob, very nearly ALL the crewing positions I have been on or have been offered were for boats over 40 feet in length. Why? Well on one a boat nearly 50 feet, it took two of us (both strong, and both in good physical condition) ten minutes or more to crank up the mainsail (even then it was a two-part halyard to make the effort doable), with me cranking until I got tired, then the other guy cranking until he got tired, then me cranking until Igot tired, then he cranking and maybe me cranking again. That was the main sail. Thanks for positively re-confirming that you are an idiot. BB As usual, you are an idiot. BB (JAXAshby) wrote: no bb, a larger boat takes more effort unless every last thing is electric, and then only until the electric stuff breaks. Put all that electric stuff on a boat and you no longer have a sailboat, you have a motorboat with sticks, and typically a LARGE motorboat with sticks, what with all the 200 amp alternators, 800 amps of batteries, a large wind generator, a large genset, 300 watts of solar power, a fifty pound windlass, 500 pounds of anchor chain on two 50 pound anchors, 150# of dinghy davits, 50# of jib/staysail furling, 40# of mainsail furling, 50# of electric winches on each side of the cockpit, and 1,500# of extra diesel fuel to run all that that stuff plus motor more often because the boat is way down on its lines. Pile all the electric stuff on a boat under 50 feet, let alone under 40 feet, and you might as well buy a trawler and get a full size refridgerator to go with it. As usual, you are an idiot. BB Bigger boats, properly equipped, often require less physical ability to manage. You won't find a 30 foot boat with hydraulic winches, roller main, and other assistive equipment very often. BB Hi all, A friend singlehands his boat, a 64 footer, ex-rescue boat, and he is 62 years old. He just brought it down from Seattle to San Diego and moves it around the bay by himself. He has had it for about 7 years. It has almost no equipment upgrades to help. Another friend brought his boat down from Vancouver and sail Mexico for the season. It is a newer schooner, has every gadget to help but it still 67 feet on deck and 74 feet overall. And another person (not really a friend but a good sailor) sails his 62 footer all over the place by himself including multiple trips to the South Pacific and does it well when he is sober. I have watched him bring his boat into the slip with 10 knots of wind on his beam blowing him toward his slipmate and never appear to be out of control. Each of the three above can singlehandly take their boat off a mooring or out of a dock, spend the day sailing the bay, and return to the mooring or dock without help. Each of them have made passages long and short without crew. . I singlehand my boat, a 46 footer. I have upgraded my equipment to help and have everything ran to the cockpit. I have roller furling on jib and main. Electric primary winches. And I am looking into the Hoyt jib boom with a staysail/sayer rig to ease the work a bit more. With this boat the longest I have been a sea is about 24 hours, a nasty jaunt against wind and waves. The ride was easier than my smaller boat, and I have no reason to expect any more trouble with singlehanding this boat than a 30 footer. Mike |
Optimum boat size for singlehandling
12 inches, bb? about 4 strokes?
seems so. now, go back to your dreams of getting laid by a 20 year old girl because you own a 48 foot boat and your belly is too big to crank in a mainsail without an electric winch. geesh, dude. take up exercise and loss that belly. Then you won't have to be considering a boat that if the electrics break when you are at sea and and 28 knots winds come along might kill you. Or buy a Corvette, a gold Rolex and aligator shoes and go trolling for chickies. Thanks for positively re-confirming that you are an idiot. BB now, billie bob, that wasn't a nice thing to say. Did I insult the size of your pee-pee? That was not my intention. I was merely saying that a total electric boat only works as long as he total electrics work. billie bob, very nearly ALL the crewing positions I have been on or have been offered were for boats over 40 feet in length. Why? Well on one a boat nearly 50 feet, it took two of us (both strong, and both in good physical condition) ten minutes or more to crank up the mainsail (even then it was a two-part halyard to make the effort doable), with me cranking until I got tired, then the other guy cranking until he got tired, then me cranking until Igot tired, then he cranking and maybe me cranking again. That was the main sail. Thanks for positively re-confirming that you are an idiot. BB As usual, you are an idiot. BB (JAXAshby) wrote: no bb, a larger boat takes more effort unless every last thing is electric, and then only until the electric stuff breaks. Put all that electric stuff on a boat and you no longer have a sailboat, you have a motorboat with sticks, and typically a LARGE motorboat with sticks, what with all the 200 amp alternators, 800 amps of batteries, a large wind generator, a large genset, 300 watts of solar power, a fifty pound windlass, 500 pounds of anchor chain on two 50 pound anchors, 150# of dinghy davits, 50# of jib/staysail furling, 40# of mainsail furling, 50# of electric winches on each side of the cockpit, and 1,500# of extra diesel fuel to run all that that stuff plus motor more often because the boat is way down on its lines. Pile all the electric stuff on a boat under 50 feet, let alone under 40 feet, and you might as well buy a trawler and get a full size refridgerator to go with it. As usual, you are an idiot. BB Bigger boats, properly equipped, often require less physical ability to manage. You won't find a 30 foot boat with hydraulic winches, roller main, and other assistive equipment very often. BB Hi all, A friend singlehands his boat, a 64 footer, ex-rescue boat, and he is 62 years old. He just brought it down from Seattle to San Diego and moves it around the bay by himself. He has had it for about 7 years. It has almost no equipment upgrades to help. Another friend brought his boat down from Vancouver and sail Mexico for the season. It is a newer schooner, has every gadget to help but it still 67 feet on deck and 74 feet overall. And another person (not really a friend but a good sailor) sails his 62 footer all over the place by himself including multiple trips to the South Pacific and does it well when he is sober. I have watched him bring his boat into the slip with 10 knots of wind on his beam blowing him toward his slipmate and never appear to be out of control. Each of the three above can singlehandly take their boat off a mooring or out of a dock, spend the day sailing the bay, and return to the mooring or dock without help. Each of them have made passages long and short without crew. . I singlehand my boat, a 46 footer. I have upgraded my equipment to help and have everything ran to the cockpit. I have roller furling on jib and main. Electric primary winches. And I am looking into the Hoyt jib boom with a staysail/sayer rig to ease the work a bit more. With this boat the longest I have been a sea is about 24 hours, a nasty jaunt against wind and waves. The ride was easier than my smaller boat, and I have no reason to expect any more trouble with singlehanding this boat than a 30 footer. Mike |
Optimum boat size for single handling
Optimum is a fuzzy concept.. Optimum for what ?
Day-sailing vs passage making different optima apply. The fatigue that you have in a small light boat in a seaway may impact your ability to concentrate, and the compromise on size vs speed is still pretty much as given in a conventional design. Perhaps the Tri and cat sailors have something in the speed that allows them to sail in bursts. The Round the world single handers do seem to have gone to the type specific fast light boats but I would not want to own one... I have a 20,000lb 40 ft boat with long keel and centerboard, with a 29 ft waterline and a yawl rig with low aspect ratio (hoist 37 boom 17) main, rating PHRF 174. The genoa sheet loads max in the 2000 lb range based on the Harken calculations (http://www.harken.com/blocks/loads.pdf) and the winches need to be sized for that. If I was going to seriously singlehand, I would probably go for a Cutter/yawl for most flexibility of rig and redundancy. With a two speed Mainsheet (4:1 and 16:1) I can trim everything with modest strength (I am 6' 220lbs) and more important my theoretically 105 lb girl friend can as well. (current women friends are a bit more robust S) The heaviest job on board is hauling the 55lb anchor and 50ft of chain, but the windlass does that nicely, backed up by the cockpit winches if needed. -- Sheldon Haynie Texas Instruments 50 Phillipe Cote Manchester, NH 03101 603 222 8652 |
Optimum boat size for single handling
Optimum is a fuzzy concept.. Optimum for what ?
Day-sailing vs passage making different optima apply. The fatigue that you have in a small light boat in a seaway may impact your ability to concentrate, and the compromise on size vs speed is still pretty much as given in a conventional design. Perhaps the Tri and cat sailors have something in the speed that allows them to sail in bursts. The Round the world single handers do seem to have gone to the type specific fast light boats but I would not want to own one... I have a 20,000lb 40 ft boat with long keel and centerboard, with a 29 ft waterline and a yawl rig with low aspect ratio (hoist 37 boom 17) main, rating PHRF 174. The genoa sheet loads max in the 2000 lb range based on the Harken calculations (http://www.harken.com/blocks/loads.pdf) and the winches need to be sized for that. If I was going to seriously singlehand, I would probably go for a Cutter/yawl for most flexibility of rig and redundancy. With a two speed Mainsheet (4:1 and 16:1) I can trim everything with modest strength (I am 6' 220lbs) and more important my theoretically 105 lb girl friend can as well. (current women friends are a bit more robust S) The heaviest job on board is hauling the 55lb anchor and 50ft of chain, but the windlass does that nicely, backed up by the cockpit winches if needed. -- Sheldon Haynie Texas Instruments 50 Phillipe Cote Manchester, NH 03101 603 222 8652 |
Optimum boat size for single handling
"single-handed" was the definition, as was "off-shore". Tacit to the question
asked of the brokers was an an adult man is better than average physical condition and greater than average strength, but also not a young, endurance athlete/racer into the game for the glory and/or money. Optimum is a fuzzy concept.. Optimum for what ? Day-sailing vs passage making different optima apply. The fatigue that you have in a small light boat in a seaway may impact your ability to concentrate, and the compromise on size vs speed is still pretty much as given in a conventional design. Perhaps the Tri and cat sailors have something in the speed that allows them to sail in bursts. The Round the world single handers do seem to have gone to the type specific fast light boats but I would not want to own one... I have a 20,000lb 40 ft boat with long keel and centerboard, with a 29 ft waterline and a yawl rig with low aspect ratio (hoist 37 boom 17) main, rating PHRF 174. The genoa sheet loads max in the 2000 lb range based on the Harken calculations (http://www.harken.com/blocks/loads.pdf) and the winches need to be sized for that. If I was going to seriously singlehand, I would probably go for a Cutter/yawl for most flexibility of rig and redundancy. With a two speed Mainsheet (4:1 and 16:1) I can trim everything with modest strength (I am 6' 220lbs) and more important my theoretically 105 lb girl friend can as well. (current women friends are a bit more robust ) The heaviest job on board is hauling the 55lb anchor and 50ft of chain, but the windlass does that nicely, backed up by the cockpit winches if needed. -- Sheldon Haynie Texas Instruments 50 Phillipe Cote Manchester, NH 03101 603 222 8652 |
Optimum boat size for single handling
"single-handed" was the definition, as was "off-shore". Tacit to the question
asked of the brokers was an an adult man is better than average physical condition and greater than average strength, but also not a young, endurance athlete/racer into the game for the glory and/or money. Optimum is a fuzzy concept.. Optimum for what ? Day-sailing vs passage making different optima apply. The fatigue that you have in a small light boat in a seaway may impact your ability to concentrate, and the compromise on size vs speed is still pretty much as given in a conventional design. Perhaps the Tri and cat sailors have something in the speed that allows them to sail in bursts. The Round the world single handers do seem to have gone to the type specific fast light boats but I would not want to own one... I have a 20,000lb 40 ft boat with long keel and centerboard, with a 29 ft waterline and a yawl rig with low aspect ratio (hoist 37 boom 17) main, rating PHRF 174. The genoa sheet loads max in the 2000 lb range based on the Harken calculations (http://www.harken.com/blocks/loads.pdf) and the winches need to be sized for that. If I was going to seriously singlehand, I would probably go for a Cutter/yawl for most flexibility of rig and redundancy. With a two speed Mainsheet (4:1 and 16:1) I can trim everything with modest strength (I am 6' 220lbs) and more important my theoretically 105 lb girl friend can as well. (current women friends are a bit more robust ) The heaviest job on board is hauling the 55lb anchor and 50ft of chain, but the windlass does that nicely, backed up by the cockpit winches if needed. -- Sheldon Haynie Texas Instruments 50 Phillipe Cote Manchester, NH 03101 603 222 8652 |
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