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* Wilbur Hubbard wrote, On 4/16/2007 3:27 PM:
"Jeff" wrote in message ... .... More lame excuses than Carter's got pills! 1) undersized sails to reduce the danger of capsize tells me you realize you sail an unsafe boat. Using the engine more is a necessity with undersized sails unless you enjoy sitting and wallowing in the slop. No - I wanted the stack pack, and I don't like "deck sweeper" jibs that restricted visibility. I wasn't trying to under size the sails, I just had no reason to oversize them. 2) a boat that capsizes and stays upside-down in a mere 45 knot blow in flat water is probably going to capsize in a thirty knot blow in a six foot sea. You just don't have the benefit of a heavy keel that self-rights a boat if it capsizes and, more importantly, keeps it from capsizing in the first place. Sorry, you don't seem to understand the physics here. In general, it would actually take both a 45 knots gust AND a large wave to capsize a cat. 3) You were impressed by a turn of speed, which turn of speed comes at the expense of safety. In my opinion, that's a logical choice only if you single hand and don't value your life or have relatives who depend on you being alive. Any sane, responsible, family man would forego the speed for safety. You selfish lust for a few more knots of speed which is probably no longer in evidence because of how you overloaded your boat might well cause the demise of you and your loved ones. Simply unconscionable, Jeff. Your comments might be worth some consideration if in fact I was in the habit of making North Atlantic crossings in winter. But you know well that I have never taken my family out on anything longer than a simple overnight crossing, and severe weather does not hit without warning. Time to grow up and accept your responsibilities. You're funny, Neal! You've never taken any responsibility - never married, never had a family, never owned property. You lost your boat so now you hide behind sock puppets. And you lecture about "responsibility." BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH! Sell that death trap NOW and buy something safe. May I suggest a nice heavy displacement, safe rugged Westsail 32? One of those survived almost unscathed the Perfect Storm even when left abandoned and washed up on shore days later. I have good friends that had a Westsail (and are themselves good friends of the skipper of Satori). They loved the security of the boat. However, the boat was too heavy for them to handle as they got older, and they ended up powering all of the time. And remember, in the infamous "Queen's Birthday" Typhoon several years ago two boats ended up on the bottom - a Westsail that was abandoned (because no one on board could handle the tiller) and another heavy displacement monohull that was lost with all hands. The two multihulls that were abandoned were later salvaged. |
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