Greenheart
Well-Known Member
I was thinking of what Seajet said months ago, about attaching an emptied 'two-pint milk carton' to the masthead of a dinghy, to prevent the inconvenience of inversion...
...and at the time I commented that two pints wouldn't be enough. But looking on the web today, I read that even 20 litres of buoyancy can be insufficient to stop inversion, in cases of sudden capsize.
Investigating further, I found on another forum, a discussion of whether in fact a masthead float is a good idea at all...
...and the fact that Bethwaite deliberately designed his boats to invert, rather than blow away at sea leaving the crew adrift.
Worth a quick look:
http://www.yachtsandyachting.com/fo...643&KW=crewsaver&PN=1&title=masthead-bouyancy
I wonder whether (aesthetics aside) there might be any value in buoyancy at the spreaders, or even lower, enabling enough of the mast to go under to prevent the boat drifting rapidly away, but also preventing complete inversion, and leaving most of the righting-work done?
...and at the time I commented that two pints wouldn't be enough. But looking on the web today, I read that even 20 litres of buoyancy can be insufficient to stop inversion, in cases of sudden capsize.
Investigating further, I found on another forum, a discussion of whether in fact a masthead float is a good idea at all...
...and the fact that Bethwaite deliberately designed his boats to invert, rather than blow away at sea leaving the crew adrift.
Worth a quick look:
http://www.yachtsandyachting.com/fo...643&KW=crewsaver&PN=1&title=masthead-bouyancy
I wonder whether (aesthetics aside) there might be any value in buoyancy at the spreaders, or even lower, enabling enough of the mast to go under to prevent the boat drifting rapidly away, but also preventing complete inversion, and leaving most of the righting-work done?
