flaming
Well-Known Member
I can think of 5 possible causes.
1. The engineering on the keel and/or keel attachment was incorrect.
2. The manufacture of the keel and or/attachment was incorrect.
3. When the boat was put together after shipping to Aus, it was put together incorrectly.
4. It had sustained damage that weakened the structure
5. The failure was the result of a collision that was outside of the design parameters.
Of all of those I think 4 is very unlikely as the boat was brand new and had supposedly only done a few days sailing. 5 is probably also fairly unlikely, although not impossible, as there doesn't seem to be a lot of damage to the hull other than the missing keel.
1. The engineering on the keel and/or keel attachment was incorrect.
2. The manufacture of the keel and or/attachment was incorrect.
3. When the boat was put together after shipping to Aus, it was put together incorrectly.
4. It had sustained damage that weakened the structure
5. The failure was the result of a collision that was outside of the design parameters.
Of all of those I think 4 is very unlikely as the boat was brand new and had supposedly only done a few days sailing. 5 is probably also fairly unlikely, although not impossible, as there doesn't seem to be a lot of damage to the hull other than the missing keel.