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Gould 0738 wrote:
Few sailing purists would choose a MacGregor. I agree... but it's not a matter of "sailing purists." We have several friends who have owned Mac 26X's so i don't intend to just slam them... but (for example) after I took one out on a Lightning (a 1930s design, classy boat but not a hot-rod) he then wanted me to come sailing with him on his boat and help him "fix" it. It's certainly true that I am spoiled... but it seems unlikely that anybody who has sailed a well-balanced, good performing sailboat, is going to be in the least satisfied with the sailing characteristics of a Mac-26. They are also beastly to try and steer in a chop. ... A performance oriented powerboater would not choose a MacGregor, either. Probably about the same, relative to it's sailing performance. MacGregor invented the retracting keel adaptation that energized the trailerable sailboat market. That is a blatant lie. Centerboards, daggerboards, swing keels, etc etc were all invented prior to the turn of the last century. You need to read the entire sentence. They invented the "adaptation that energized the trailerable sailboat market". I wouldn't be sruprised to learn that the Egyptians had retracting keels- but I don't think they had a lot of trailer boats. :-) Roger MacGregor is a better designer than he's often given credit for, but he didn't invent a darn thing. Not the centerboard, not the swing keel, and not the "adaptation." You can tinker with the wording but it's misleading at best. Why not tell the truth... MacGregor's early trailersailer designs were innovative, inexpensive, and popular. ... The innovative solution was MacGregor's water ballast system. They didn't invent this either. No, they didn't invent water ballast- but they did design MacGregor's water ballast system. So? I invented the "King water ballast system." I could claim to have invented dozens of things... especially if you let me make the claim for things I saw other people using first. Again, it's misleading at best. There were other water ballasted trailerable sailboats before Macgregor began building them. It might be noted that the MacGregor 26 has limited stability without the ballast tank full. Several of them have flipped over, at least one with fatalities. I can't imagine anybody sailing without filling the ballast tank. Is that a problem with the design, or user error? Depends on who you ask. In the case with fatalities, the boat was being used under power, without the mast in place, but with a crowd of people on the cabin top. Personally I consider it a design flaw, but it should be noted that *any* boat, including the QE2, has limits to their righting moment that must not be exceeded. IMHO it is within reasonable expectations for a 26' boat to carry a half-dozen people on it's coachroof without flipping over. It's also in the nature of this type of design that it has great initial stability, but little or no reserve. In other words, it will heel a little as a warning, and then suddenly flop down on it's side. That's why I consider it a design flaw. I've actually helped launch a MacGregor in the past. Aside from getting the mast up and the forestay secured, it wasn't really any more of a hassle than launching a powerboat. I thought getting the mast down and properly secured was a bigger job, as I remember. However, we didn't launch the boat during this short test and I wouldn't want to claim that we did. OK. It would be worth mentioning that you have done it, and your impressions, if it doesn't exceed the article's length limit. I'd agree with your assessment. One reason we got the smaller boat is that we wanted onet that was easier to trailer, rig, and launch. In all the years we sailed & cruised, and were members of several different clubs, I never saw a boat that was easy as ours. Like I said, I'm spoiled! And it will continue to surprise many, as long as there isn't a *real* sailboat passing it... which happens frequently. I think you're probably right on all counts. This boat would not be the first choice for somebody primarily interested in performance sailing. It's a recreational sailboat. I think the idea is to have "fun" doing some sailing, and not worry about whether somebody else is sailing faster, more directly upwind, etc. Sure. If you want to move along without the motor noise, ya got that. And speed isn't the only criteria for sailing, obviously. My objection is that it *doesn't* provide the "fun" of sailing... not the heel, not the feel, not the handling... as evidenced by most of the people I know who *used* to have these boats and moved on. The MacGregor sails better than almost any powerboat. :-) Now that part is definitely true! ... It certainly motors faster than most sailboats. Yep. It motors faster than my motorboat, in fact. ... It's a unique, highly compromised vessel that can provide a lot of fun- but will suffer in direct comparison with boats that specialize in one aspect or another of the MacGregor compromise. I don't think it's fair to say that a motorboat without sails is "compromised." Certainly I don't think that the many sailboats I've owned with no motor (some of which it would be physically impossible to mount a motor on) were "compromised" either. They do what they're intended. The MacGregor has put 35,000 people on the water. But *not* in this Pow-R-Sail-R boat. MacGregor likes to imply this, and it's more misdirection. C'mon Chuck, you and I both object strenuously to this kind of malarkey in politics! Why are you pushing it in boating? ... That ain't all bad. I didn't say it was all bad. I hope you don't see my posts as any kind of hatchet job. But you keep saying "it's a compromise" and then ignoring the other side of the trade-offs. .... Will my next boat be a MacGregor 26? Nope. Would I want to venture out into 6 footers in a 2500 pound boat? Nope, again. But the concept has a lot of merit- Yes, it does. So drop the advertising fluff & the misleading hype and concentrate on the merits. It's a great water toy... and it's not a bad camper trailer either ![]() Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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