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Alas and alack. Though I've sailed boats as small as 8 feet and as large as 75
feet ... boats with one sail, two sails, three sails, four sails and even five sails ... in winds as little as 0.01 knots and a high as 60+ knots (pegged ASI) with sustained gusts ... in waters from the Pacific to the Atlantic to the Caribbean to LIS to the Chesepeake to Midwestern lakes, I have never actually sailed any of the 750 some Westsail 32's made. This means, of course, I am totally out of bounds -- utterly without experience -- with my statement that a fat-assed 21,000 pound boat with a 11-1/2 foot beam and a 26 foot waterline is a slow sailor. Unless, perhaps, you might be willing to go out on a limp and accept my personal experience of passing by W-32's left and right and north and south in every winds I have ever been sailing and have chanced upon a W32 also sailing. Would I buy a W32? Of course I would if they weren't priced about 50% of their intrinsic value. Lots of similarly capable boats out there with asking prices well under current W32 alure. For the person not able to distinguish a Weatherly 32 from a Roughwater 33, a Westsail 32 is a safe choice. Go spend the money. Mr. Ashby: Have you sailed a Westsail 32? Respectfully, Dick Behan "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... W32's are not fast boats; they were designed originally (Colin Archer) as rescue boats, to aid Norwegian fisherman in distress in winter storms in the North Sea. Seaworthiness was paramount, and nothing stood in the W32 was designed (reliable sources say, on the factory floor as glass was laid up) as a fiberglass version of the 1930's Wm Aitkin 32 foot design called "Eric", which was Aitkin's version (many would say, improved version) of the Colin Archer boats. The Aitkins 38 footer "Ingrid" lives on today, though the 36 footer "Erin" is long forgotten by most (seems there is probably good reason for that). Keep in mind that Colin Archer boats were designed in their day to be sailed by iron men of skill and athletic coordination. The boats needed a LOT of sail to make them move in light winds, sail that had to be struck very quickly as the winds piped up. |
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