zoidberg
Well-Known Member
Downflooding and AVS is again in the news, with publication of the MAIB's Interim Report into the fatal 'Bayesian' sinking.
The good souls at the MAIB want us to 'learn lessons' and apply them to our circumstances. Experience tells me that's akin to 'herding cats'.
Here's what I posted on an Owners' Group, relevant perhaps to some very much smaller boats...
Well?
The good souls at the MAIB want us to 'learn lessons' and apply them to our circumstances. Experience tells me that's akin to 'herding cats'.
Here's what I posted on an Owners' Group, relevant perhaps to some very much smaller boats...
I'll 'raise a hare' which many will not want to be reminded of.
News emerging from an interim MAIB report into the fatal downflooding/sinking of the 'Bayesian' draws attention to the oft-ignored Angle of Vanishing Stability. Neither the owner nor the crew were aware that her AVS was as low as 70 degrees.
Our Cutlass 27, in the 'light ship' configuration as designed, is excellent in that respect - due, for the most part, to the relatively large ballast:displacement ratio. That's a reassuring safety factor - but many do not realise that is NOT a fixed value....
The C27, due to its modest size, is particularly sensitive to changes having significant effects on AVS, and therefore ability to recover swiftly from a knockdown before downflooding sinks the boat. Roller-furled headsails, mast-mounted radar, gantries with PV panels, 6-man liferafts mounted on cabin top.... all add weight and 'lever arms' above the Centre of Buoyancy where least appropriate.
That's why my 6mm Grade 80 anchor chain is lighter than most others' and is stowed in the deep bilge, and my liferaft stowage is also below the waterline - not perched up high.
This MAIB report is a 'wakeup call' for those who will hear it and pay heed.
Well?