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Matt Pedersen wrote:
The Tartan has a nice reputation but the centerboard doesn't kick up if you run aground and it can be hard to repair the mechanism if you ground hard and bend something. Hello Matt, Thanks for your great contributions to this thread. I enjoyed pouring over the many details you provided. I'm glad I'm not the only one with some reservations about centerboards. The fact that they can break, and the reduced righting moment are almost deal breakers in my mind. Granted there will be many places I won't be able to go, but the list of places I _WILL_ be able to go to is already endless so I don't think I'll run out of places to go ![]() under some circumstances a centerboard may be "safer" but overall I think the balance tips towards a fixed keel. As I mentioned to Frank on a previous post, one of the things I am curious about is how different boats behave under bare poles in heavy winds. Do you know how the Ranger 33 behaves? Or the other boats on your list? Will they go bow to wind? stern to wind? or lay abeam? I don't have that much experience under bare poles but I read somewhere that most designs that lay bow to wind tend to have full keels, whereas most modern designs will tend to lay abeam. Do you have any experience in this? Thanks, Bob Whitaker "Free Spirit" "Matt/Meribeth Pedersen" wrote in message hlink.net... "Bob Whitaker" wrote in message om... Wow, impressive list of boats! Thanks for the post! I'd be interested in knowing which of these you liked best and which you've had the opportunity to sail under reduced sail and how they handled. I'm very interested in your comments, specially about pros and cons of centerboards. I just thought it might be yet another thing that could break down so I wasn't considering centerboard boats for my dream trip (even if it meant missing out on shallow anchorages). I may start a new thread on this topic one of these days, seeing as the original post turned into mud-slinging central. I think the Morgan 34 (and the CCA era M33, not the Out Island) are pretty good boats. The Tartan has a nice reputation but the centerboard doesn't kick up if you run aground and it can be hard to repair the mechanism if you ground hard and bend something. The Morgan 34 CB doesn't kick up either, but if you do break something it is relatively easy to fix since it's a cable mechanism. I have sailed on the Alberg 35, Ericson 35, C&C 34 (deep keel), Ranger 33 and Yankee 30. All of them are decent boats but the C&C is more squirrely than I like going dead downwind. I think the Ranger 33 is probably the best sailing boat of the bunch, it really has no vices. I extensively crewed on a Ranger 33 for a number of years, racing in all weathers. It was my first experience with a keel boat that stayed on its feet in heavy air downwind.. A friend who owned one swears by them.. You might get arguments from owners of the Ericson 35 that they are just as good as the Ranger, but I don't have the heavy air miles on one to confirm the opinion ( and I'm thinking of the Bruce King designed Mark II version here). The Yankee 30 also has a good rep but again my only experience with them is in relatively light air. They are popular in San Francisco, which tells me they do pretty well in a breeze. I do like the Ericson 35 a little more for cruising than the Ranger, the interior and engine access is just marginally enough nicer that it tips the scales to the Ericson. All the boats listed will not be a floating condo - don't expect a lot of room, and some may seem even smaller than the Cal 34. Random thoughts on the boats I haven't sailed: The Allied Seawind was the first fiberglass boat to do a circumnavigation, and I like Tom Gilmer as a designer so it's got to be a good boat ![]() The Luders 34 and Alberg 37 are really pretty boats, but I can't comment on their handling. I haven't sailed on the Douglas 32 but it's reportedly a good light air boat and I think Ted Brewer thought it was one of his better designs. I have a friend with a Mercator 30 who has taken it to Alaska several times. Nice boat, enormous V-berth, has a little weather helm. They are not well known outside of the Pacific Northwest, but at least one has done a circumnavigation. They could use a little more sail area, but do make nice cruisers. The Nich 32 is stout, lots of room for a 32'er and even with her bluff bow will do pretty well going to windward. As far a centerboard boats go, for a trip in the Gulf/Florida/Bahamas I think it's almost a requirement. Not so much for some of the Caribbean. The big disadvantage is of course the added maintenence of the board and it's raising/lowering mechanism. That and they can clunk around in the slot in a seaway, which I always found disconcerting. They do help you go to windward if your sails are up to it, but there are many people who glass the board in place and forget about sailing close winded. I wouldn't, but then I hate sailing boats that don't go to weather well. Of course, seaworthiness is always an issue with centerboard boats. Deep keels have more favorable wieght distribution for resisting and recovery from capsize. A competent, well prepared crew should be able to make a centerboarder work for the type of trip your thinking of though. It wouldn't be my choice for a circumnavigation, but would be for for Gulf cruising. AFter the Fastnet storm of 79, there was a lot of research done on characteristics that help or hinder capsize. One fallout of that was a capsize screen formula. It is Beam (feet) divided by displacement^.3333 (displacement to the 1/3 power, displacement in cubic feet). The result of this formula should be a value less than 2. I have always argued that the formula is a little simplistic because it doesn't take into account ballast placement (you could have 4000 pounds of lead at the top of the mast and the formula would say you have a seaworthy boat). However, for the boats under discussion it should give good results. That's about it for now. Follow up if you'd like, and hopefully the discussion won't go off track like an IOR boat in a breeze again. Matt |
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