snowleopard
Well-Known Member
I'm always a bit sceptical of designer's theories. Some say you should have bow and stern different shapes, e.g. V bow, flat stern, to prevent hobby-horsing yet the Twins is pretty well symmetrical fore and aft.
I spoke to someone who was building a tri from the same design as me. He built a scale model and tried to capsize it in wind and waves. He said the only way to tip it was stalling on the face of a wave and sliding backwards when the stern of the lee float dug in and it turned over along the diagonal. Prout told me their tapered sterns prevented digging in, unlike the common forward-sloping transoms.
I don't understand how less beam could prevent pitchpoling though.
I spoke to someone who was building a tri from the same design as me. He built a scale model and tried to capsize it in wind and waves. He said the only way to tip it was stalling on the face of a wave and sliding backwards when the stern of the lee float dug in and it turned over along the diagonal. Prout told me their tapered sterns prevented digging in, unlike the common forward-sloping transoms.
I don't understand how less beam could prevent pitchpoling though.