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On Jan 3, 11:06 pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 23:38:18 -0800 (PST), " wrote: There's no harm in catching up with the wave in front of you per se (though it gets harder to do as the waves get bigger and faster). That invariably results in a lot of green water over the decks in my experience, and can definitely pitch pole smaller boats as the bow digs in and stops. Invariably? You need a new skipper! As a former racer of atrapeze dingy I know that full stop that launches the crew around the forestay. In the conditions where that happens the winners get to the bottom mark without crashing even though they will overtake a bunch of waves on the way... Of course, the dingy racer is moving very fast over relatively slow, small waves with an unreasonable press of sail barely countered by the movable ballast of the crew perched precariously on the back corner of the boat. Racers live to be on the edge of control. I don't want to generalize too much, but the situation offshore in an ocean capable cruising yacht is likely to be very different. Even in a yacht fast enough to be overtaking large waves the prudent cruiser will reduce sail to keep the boat within its controllable speeds and will remove sails that press the bow down and sails that increase the tendency to broach. In many conditions these tactics will allow fast boats to overtake waves in comfort and control. -- Tom. |
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