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![]() When I was a kid in the late Sixties and my family was just getting into boating, "cathedral" hulls were all the rage. In case anybody doesn't know what I'm talking about, that's the term for that pseudo-trimaran hull design like the boat the father character drove in the TV show "Flipper." That particular boat was a 22-foot Thunderbird Iroquis. Thunderbird, the precursor to Formula, was one of the biggest users of the design. Both Johnson and Evinrude sold cathedral-hull boats under their own names in those days. I go to my share of boat shows, and I haven't seen a boat with that hull design in decades. It obviously had some advantage over a conventional hull, but what was it? And why did the design fall out of favor with manufacturers? Geoff -- "The future stretches before us, brown and sticky, like the broad smile of a mongoloid eating peanut butter off a spoon." -- snide |
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