Walther
Well-Known Member
While Dancrane has doubtless long since purchased his boat, this thread has a lot of misinformation that may deter other potential Albacore purchasers. Below are my comments as a current Albacore sailor.
“The Albacore ... is also very unforgiving, which forces skillbuilding. Keeping the hull flat is very difficult; the boat seems to want to roll about 5 degrees from vertical before it settles down.” Gross exaggeration.
“The sail area of the Albacore is way too large for a crew of two with no trapeze. Even a crew of three can have a hard time controlling the rig, especially upwind.” Again, this is nonsense, The Albacore was designed to function well in both light and heavy wind conditions. Any competent dinghy sailors will be able to maintain control in up to 20 kts.
“Attempting to gybe an Albacore with the centreboard down will almost definitely turn it over in a most spectacular way.” Raising the centreboard whilst sailing downwind is pretty standard practice in most/all dinghies, I would have thought.
“One look at an Albacore is all that is needed to see that it is a very old design. The boat has seat tanks separate from the gunwales, which is a design that has been mostly forgotten on newer boats.” This is correct.
“The tanks are too small for the volume of the hull, so the cockpit fills up with hundreds of litres of water during a capsize.” More exaggeration.
“On some hulls, such as those made by Ontario Yachts, the centreboard trunk allows water to come back in while it is being bailed.” Ontario Yachts’ version of the Albacore is not exactly the epitome of the class, and hasn’t been manufactured in decades. Most were made to a price point for the Royal Canadian Sea Cadets.
“The Albacore is not a good boat, by any measure. It is fast, in fact, it is rated as faster than a Laser, but keeping the big rig and unstable hull under control is difficult.” No, no, no. He makes it sound like you have to be some sort of Olympic athlete to sail an Albacore reasonably well. That is simply untrue.
“High winds make an already fussy boat very deadly. The fear while sailing it is what makes it so exciting.” Yet more hyperbolic nonsense. The Albacore is not “fussy”, let alone “very deadly”. It’s actually quite well mannered, though it’s not a keelboat and balance is important (like most other dinghies).
“The Albacore ... is also very unforgiving, which forces skillbuilding. Keeping the hull flat is very difficult; the boat seems to want to roll about 5 degrees from vertical before it settles down.” Gross exaggeration.
“The sail area of the Albacore is way too large for a crew of two with no trapeze. Even a crew of three can have a hard time controlling the rig, especially upwind.” Again, this is nonsense, The Albacore was designed to function well in both light and heavy wind conditions. Any competent dinghy sailors will be able to maintain control in up to 20 kts.
“Attempting to gybe an Albacore with the centreboard down will almost definitely turn it over in a most spectacular way.” Raising the centreboard whilst sailing downwind is pretty standard practice in most/all dinghies, I would have thought.
“One look at an Albacore is all that is needed to see that it is a very old design. The boat has seat tanks separate from the gunwales, which is a design that has been mostly forgotten on newer boats.” This is correct.
“The tanks are too small for the volume of the hull, so the cockpit fills up with hundreds of litres of water during a capsize.” More exaggeration.
“On some hulls, such as those made by Ontario Yachts, the centreboard trunk allows water to come back in while it is being bailed.” Ontario Yachts’ version of the Albacore is not exactly the epitome of the class, and hasn’t been manufactured in decades. Most were made to a price point for the Royal Canadian Sea Cadets.
“The Albacore is not a good boat, by any measure. It is fast, in fact, it is rated as faster than a Laser, but keeping the big rig and unstable hull under control is difficult.” No, no, no. He makes it sound like you have to be some sort of Olympic athlete to sail an Albacore reasonably well. That is simply untrue.
“High winds make an already fussy boat very deadly. The fear while sailing it is what makes it so exciting.” Yet more hyperbolic nonsense. The Albacore is not “fussy”, let alone “very deadly”. It’s actually quite well mannered, though it’s not a keelboat and balance is important (like most other dinghies).
(1) Canadian Albacores are certainly not routinely sailed with trapezes. Probably you are confusing them with the CL-16 (Canadian-made unlicensed Wayfarer clone), which has an untapered mast and is available from its manufacturer fitted with a trapeze.I understood that Canadian Albacores are routinely sailed with a trapeze; and I read that this actually lessens rig tension overall. I only mentioned the trapeze because it would seem to be a cure for the exhausting hike which the standard Alb requires in a breeze.
+1Ignore that review. Many of the comments on that review, plus the rest of the website it came from, leads me to the conclusion that the guy does not have a clue what he's talking about.
An Albacore is dangerously fast, but the 29er is perfect?? The Laser needs a trapeze if the sail goes any bigger than standard?? (Rooster 8.1 take note!) The Alberbarge is over ragged, however 420s aren't any good because if your crew goes out on the wire in light winds they end up in the water. And gybing a dinghy in a blow with the plate down results in a swim...no **** Sherlock!
The Internet is a wonderful resource for information, but you also get drivel like this.
^^^ THIS ^^^I don't know what experience the guy has but most of his comments are laughable. The Albacore is a very easy boat to sail in comparison to most other racing dinghies. It is far less work to sail upwind in strong winds than many other boats and is faster than almost all other non-trapeze dinghies in these conditions. It's also fast in light winds too and it's no more unstable downwind than any other dinghy. I can only believe he either has very limited abilities or is comparing an Albacore with an undercanvased cruising dinghy.
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