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On Mar 3, 12:00*pm, HK wrote:
Frogwatch wrote: This accident with the NFL players off Clearwater where the boat overturned is tragic. *What went wrong? *The weather forecast was poor when they left shore, so what were they thinking? *Was it simply a matter of being too macho to exercise common sense? Next, once a boat turns upside down, is there any way to right them? Once righted, would a motor start (assume a 2 cycle). I'd like to know how the boat was anchored, was it from the stern, classical mistake resulting in this. Going offshore with no EPIRB used to be acceptable but today? - - - What went wrong? *From the reports I heard yesterday, the guys went 50 miles offshore in a 21' boat and were flipped by 14' to 16' waves. What were they thinking? That they were invulernable. They either were too macho or unaware of how quickly weather can change on the Gulf or both *or* they were so ignorant of the dangers of small boating, they thought their craft could handle anything they encountered. I doubt there is a way for guys in the water to flip right-side-up a boat like that. Might be able to turn back over an open boat, though. Would the motor start? Doubtful. I'm not sure the way the boat was anchored was relevant, since it apparently was rolled over. Had it been anchored from the bow, it probably would have been swamped and then it would have flipped. Back in my Jax days, I would go out 20 miles to some manmade reefs, but only after checking the weather and listening to the weather channel and only with a pack of other boats. 18-footer. No ePIRB back then. Conditions were way beyond the capabilities of the boat for sure. Who knows how or why they got themselves into that situation. As an aside, I remember reading a study a while back that showed that while many boating accidents were reported as capsizes in very few cases was capsize by waves the actual cause of the accident. Usually the boat filled with water, either by swamping or by something as simple as a missing drain plug before overturning. Once overturned I think your chances of righting the hull are small. I watched a few guys right an overturned 18-20' runabout and try to tow it fast enough to get it to drain. Before they could get 10' the thing would flip back over. This was in 1' chop at most and not in dangerous conditions. As a matter of fact the had jetskis and were in wetsuits and kind of goofing around. Steve P. |
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