jfm
Well-Known Member
:encouragement:
This is a conversation we can all have when I have chosen which vessel will bear the name ARTEMISIA
Will be good to see both vessels berthed side by side, old one to the right
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:encouragement:
This is a conversation we can all have when I have chosen which vessel will bear the name ARTEMISIA
This is a conversation we can all have when I have chosen which vessel will bear the name ARTEMISIA
:encouragement:
Will be good to see both vessels berthed side by side, old one to the right![]()
May I ask what the connection with Italian Baroque painters is?
this is scary... exactly what I wanted to do! By the way, I called my 550 GENTILESCHI after a painting I sold by Orazio Gentileschi that was painted on the highly precious stone Lapis Lazuli (blue) - now on loan in the National Gallery in London. So I thought it would be rather cool to call my second after that painter's more famous daughter Artemisia - especially as it is a very beautiful name in its own right.
Will you call the tender 'Onofrio'...?![]()
Here's my three penny worth if it is any help.
All stabiliser systems require the generator running and for me peace and quiet is what anchoring is about.
IMHO, if you have to have stabs running at anchor, you shouldn't be there at all. We have got used to running the gen at anchor for part of the time at least, certainly to cook lunch or keep the aircon going!, and when on the flybridge you dont notice it.
I guess they are about £70k/£80k to fit - maybe the giro No same price
So, for me, lots of things come before stabs - here's a list
Usual stuff Of these.. I have already got these on the 550
Air conditioning yes
Bimini yes
Passerelle yes
Decent Dinghy yes
Foredeck cushions etc yes
Hi Lo bathing platform - yes
Boat with big mid owners cabin yes
And then
Full wind instrumentation and alarms. have AIS
Water Maker no maybe get for new
Maybe - underwater lights yes
And (sorry I have to say this) - internal stairs no interest
Artemisia is a very fine name for a boat - intrinsically elegant - and your own personal (+business) connection makes it all the nicer. My boat's name Match has a strong (to me, and it's too hard to explain) personal/business connection too. It's much less elegant than Artemisia of course, but I'm a yorkshireman so I can reflect on the money I saved on stainless steel lettering!
this is scary... exactly what I wanted to do! By the way, I called my 550 GENTILESCHI after a painting I sold by Orazio Gentileschi that was painted on the highly precious stone Lapis Lazuli (blue) - now on loan in the National Gallery in London. So I thought it would be rather cool to call my second after that painter's more famous daughter Artemisia - especially as it is a very beautiful name in its own right.
Well, I would never dare shooting anyone on any matter of personal preferences, of course. And I fully agree that stabs are a pretty expensive bit of kit.All these would be on my list BEFORE stabilisers.
I know I'll be shot down for saying this!!!
LOL, I don't want to revamp an old debate, but you should advise Azimut, Benetti, Moonen and Sanlorenzo (among others) on that.If you went for the Princess 68 (and I realise you are weighing up an alternative) I don't think Princess will fit electric fin stabs will they? They'd fit sleipner vector fins, .65m sq, hydraulic. These would imho be much better than CMC electrics in a new build princess 68 anyway.
That's kind of a non point though Mapis. If I were to list the builders who chose something other than CMC electric fins it would be way longer list than your 4. Your 4 are of course very respectable, but imho trying to find an answer by looking at who-dun-what is a bit of dead end. Indeed the first on your list, Azimut, fit various things including Wesmar fins as OEM on Magellano, and Sunseeker put CMC electrics on hulls 1+2 of their new 86 but after trials abandoned them and will switch back to other brands for this model going forwards (I think due to the noise thing, not to stabilisation ability which CMC have no problem with)LOL, I don't want to revamp an old debate, but you should advise Azimut, Benetti, Moonen and Sanlorenzo (among others) on that.
All of them must have got the wrong side of the stick, when they decided to move from hydraulic to electric for new builds, and also for boats even bigger than the biggest Princess...!![]()
Well, I would never dare shooting anyone on any matter of personal preferences, of course. And I fully agree that stabs are a pretty expensive bit of kit.
But aside from economics, ranking stabs below cushions or u/w lights sounds unreal, sort of...
In fact, that makes me wonder if you actually tried some cruising with a stabilized boat.
Let me make an example based on a recent experience I made on a boat similar to yours, when Deleted User kindly invited me to join him for the transfer of his Ferretti from Olbia to Cagliari.
We had some quartering seas along most of the E coast of Sardinia, and we cruised at both D and P speed.
The boat handled those conditions beautifully, at anything from 10 to 20 knots and more, with nobody onboard ever feeling sick.
Which in a sense proves your point that stabs aren't essential, I suppose.
But having said that, I can assure you that whenever we were cruising at D speed, if we would have been on my boat (as well as in any other stabilized vessel, of course), the motion would have been more stable and comfortable - in spite of the significantly smaller size: almost 4m shorter and 1m narrower.
Btw, among planing boats, in my experience Ferrettis are quite stable, being wider and heavier than the average, for any given length.
Now, it's true that at planing speed the rolling flattened out significantly, courtesy of the hydrodinamic stabilization.
Otoh, it's also true that in those conditions the cruise doesn't get much more comfortable by increasing the speed, even if the rolling angle is smaller, because the boat motion becomes obviously more hectic, rather than smooth and gentle.
Bottom line, were those conditions good enough to enjoy a cruise with a 20m f/b boat? Absolutely.
BUT, would the same cruise have been more comfortable, particularly when pootling (but not only), if the boat were stabilized? You bet.
I'd be more than happy to give you a taste of stabilized pootling with my old tub next summer, when you will come to S Sardinia.
The only way to really appreciate the difference stabs can make is by turning them on and off while cruising.
And it doesn't take big seas either: I know it might sound hard to believe, but you can immediately feel the difference also with just 2 feet waves...! :encouragement:
Well, I would never dare shooting anyone on any matter of personal preferences, of course. And I fully agree that stabs are a pretty expensive bit of kit.
But aside from economics, ranking stabs below cushions or u/w lights sounds unreal, sort of...
In fact, that makes me wonder if you actually tried some cruising with a stabilized boat.
Let me make an example based on a recent experience I made on a boat similar to yours, when Deleted User kindly invited me to join him for the transfer of his Ferretti from Olbia to Cagliari.
We had some quartering seas along most of the E coast of Sardinia, and we cruised at both D and P speed.
The boat handled those conditions beautifully, at anything from 10 to 20 knots and more, with nobody onboard ever feeling sick.
Which in a sense proves your point that stabs aren't essential, I suppose.
But having said that, I can assure you that whenever we were cruising at D speed, if we would have been on my boat (as well as in any other stabilized vessel, of course), the motion would have been more stable and comfortable - in spite of the significantly smaller size: almost 4m shorter and 1m narrower.
Btw, among planing boats, in my experience Ferrettis are quite stable, being wider and heavier than the average, for any given length.
Now, it's true that at planing speed the rolling flattened out significantly, courtesy of the hydrodinamic stabilization.
Otoh, it's also true that in those conditions the cruise doesn't get much more comfortable by increasing the speed, even if the rolling angle is smaller, because the boat motion becomes obviously more hectic, rather than smooth and gentle.
Bottom line, were those conditions good enough to enjoy a cruise with a 20m f/b boat? Absolutely.
BUT, would the same cruise have been more comfortable, particularly when pootling (but not only), if the boat were stabilized? You bet.
I'd be more than happy to give you a taste of stabilized pootling with my old tub next summer, when you will come to S Sardinia.
The only way to really appreciate the difference stabs can make is by turning them on and off while cruising.
And it doesn't take big seas either: I know it might sound hard to believe, but you can immediately feel the difference also with just 2 feet waves...! :encouragement:
Haha, I knew that we would eventually come, yet again, to the point of agreeing to disagree on the whole hydr vs. elec thing, so let's just do that!That's kind of a non point though Mapis.....
Glad to hear that, it'll be a pleasure to meet at sea rather than virtually, for a change!Anyway, the plan for South Sardinia (Carloforte) this summer is coming together nicely so maybe you will be able to show me the difference.
BTW - I've got the family and friends working out dates and I was about an hour ahead of you when you suggested staying the whole summer.
Lots of planning to do yet but it still looks good.
PS
I will be looking for those quiet anchorages (no swell)!!!
Glad to hear that, it'll be a pleasure to meet at sea rather than virtually, for a change!
Btw, I'm still down here ATM, but today I moved the boat to my yard where they will pull her tomorrow, before we'll fly back home.
And this year, due to a long trip down under, we will only put the boat back in the water towards the end of May.
But don't hesitate to email me for any further details you might need!
I'm afraid I might be unable to make it for the Girotonno (as they call the tuna event), this year. It'll depend on the actual date though, let's stay in touch.OK - Thanks
We might even be there when you get back!!
Perhaps in time for that Tuna event