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Value of restored Bristol 26?
On Sun, 30 Mar 2014 06:18:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Saturday, March 29, 2014 9:26:09 PM UTC-7, Wayne. B wrote: On Sat, 29 Mar 2014 19:28:23 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: In August of 1972 my wife and I chartered a Bristol 25 for two weeks. It was our first cruising experience on Long Island Sound and Block Island. It was a pretty small boat and didn't sail very well but we had a great time. A year or two later we bought a Westerly 28 which was another small boat but it was like the Queen Mary compared to the Bristol. We did a lot of sailing on the Westerly and once got as far as eastern Maine with it - big adventure for us at the time. We actually did sell that boat for more than we paid, considerably more, but that was a time of very high inflation and we had repowered it with a new Volvo diesel. From a 25 to a 28' What made the big difference in their performance, Wayne? === Taller mast, bigger and better sails, more efficient keel with less wetted surface (lower drag, greater lift), longer water line length. It also had a much bigger main cabin. When our kids got to be 5 or 6 we decided it was time for another bigger boat and we got the Cal-34 that we had for many years. That was another huge jump in relative size and performance, still small by the standards of many, but it served us well for a long time. Understood. Unless something radical it does seem odd that a mere 3 feet can make that big of a difference. Like going from my 18 ft. Chris Craft to the 23 ft. Marquis. === When you stretch the length of a boat, usually every other dimension goes up also such as height and width. As a general rule of thumb the interior volume increases in proportion to the cube of the length. Let's look at a 25% increase just as an example. We're talking about the cube of 1.25 (1.25 x 1.25 x 1.25 = 1.95), or almost double the interior space. |
Value of restored Bristol 26?
On Sun, 30 Mar 2014 11:11:14 -0400, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 30 Mar 2014 06:18:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Saturday, March 29, 2014 9:26:09 PM UTC-7, Wayne. B wrote: On Sat, 29 Mar 2014 19:28:23 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: In August of 1972 my wife and I chartered a Bristol 25 for two weeks. It was our first cruising experience on Long Island Sound and Block Island. It was a pretty small boat and didn't sail very well but we had a great time. A year or two later we bought a Westerly 28 which was another small boat but it was like the Queen Mary compared to the Bristol. We did a lot of sailing on the Westerly and once got as far as eastern Maine with it - big adventure for us at the time. We actually did sell that boat for more than we paid, considerably more, but that was a time of very high inflation and we had repowered it with a new Volvo diesel. From a 25 to a 28' What made the big difference in their performance, Wayne? === Taller mast, bigger and better sails, more efficient keel with less wetted surface (lower drag, greater lift), longer water line length. It also had a much bigger main cabin. When our kids got to be 5 or 6 we decided it was time for another bigger boat and we got the Cal-34 that we had for many years. That was another huge jump in relative size and performance, still small by the standards of many, but it served us well for a long time. Understood. Unless something radical it does seem odd that a mere 3 feet can make that big of a difference. Like going from my 18 ft. Chris Craft to the 23 ft. Marquis. === When you stretch the length of a boat, usually every other dimension goes up also such as height and width. As a general rule of thumb the interior volume increases in proportion to the cube of the length. Let's look at a 25% increase just as an example. We're talking about the cube of 1.25 (1.25 x 1.25 x 1.25 = 1.95), or almost double the interior space. Never thought of it that way. Thanks! |
Value of restored Bristol 26?
On Sunday, March 30, 2014 8:11:14 AM UTC-7, Wayne. B wrote:
On Sun, 30 Mar 2014 06:18:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Saturday, March 29, 2014 9:26:09 PM UTC-7, Wayne. B wrote: On Sat, 29 Mar 2014 19:28:23 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: In August of 1972 my wife and I chartered a Bristol 25 for two weeks. It was our first cruising experience on Long Island Sound and Block Island. It was a pretty small boat and didn't sail very well but we had a great time. A year or two later we bought a Westerly 28 which was another small boat but it was like the Queen Mary compared to the Bristol. We did a lot of sailing on the Westerly and once got as far as eastern Maine with it - big adventure for us at the time. We actually did sell that boat for more than we paid, considerably more, but that was a time of very high inflation and we had repowered it with a new Volvo diesel. From a 25 to a 28' What made the big difference in their performance, Wayne? === Taller mast, bigger and better sails, more efficient keel with less wetted surface (lower drag, greater lift), longer water line length. It also had a much bigger main cabin. When our kids got to be 5 or 6 we decided it was time for another bigger boat and we got the Cal-34 that we had for many years. That was another huge jump in relative size and performance, still small by the standards of many, but it served us well for a long time. Understood. Unless something radical it does seem odd that a mere 3 feet can make that big of a difference. Like going from my 18 ft. Chris Craft to the 23 ft. Marquis. === When you stretch the length of a boat, usually every other dimension goes up also such as height and width. As a general rule of thumb the interior volume increases in proportion to the cube of the length. Let's look at a 25% increase just as an example. We're talking about the cube of 1.25 (1.25 x 1.25 x 1.25 = 1.95), or almost double the interior space. Understood, Wayne. My 22 is a lot bigger boat than my 18, and mt 23 is a lot smaller than my old '27 Chris Cavlier. In this case, just a little bit means a lot. |
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