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On Feb 28, 6:29 pm, Red wrote:
...What I have seen though, are ratings that Brwewer himself has done on numerous boat designs other than his own... I have not seen these. Do you have a link? However, what I want to see is experimental evidence that people actually experience less discomfort on boats with high CRs. I think the physics of the CR is so simplified that there is little reason to believe there will be much correlation between high CRs and more comfortable boats or even boats with slower rates or smaller magnitudes of heave, pitch and roll. The argument that it only works for very similar boats seems to suggest it is broken, too. Very similar boats will behave so similarly that it may be the only way to tell if you're more comfortable is to calculate the CR... Sigh, since the horse is dead it won't mind me beating on it. I think Brewer's basic premise is wrong. One more reason I think the CR is bogus is that it assumes that the sails can always provide roll damping. This is often not the case underway and is seldom if ever the case at anchor. A boat with a high CR will almost certainly be unlivable at anchor if there is even a suggestion of a ground swell. It is axiomatic that cruisers spend 90% of their time at anchor. So, even if Brewer is, by some ineffable chance, right about the CR underway you're still likely to gain a whole bunch more "comforts" on a low CR boat at anchor than you will lose underway. -- Tom. |
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