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Well I seem to recall a so called Scandinavian rock basher (HR42?) that broke up in minutes after grounding in the entrance to a drying harbour (in Scotland?).
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Dunno the details of that incident, but being continually pounded by breakers on a lee shore is a completely different thing to running into something hard on a one-off basis. As mentioned, in Scandinavia, hitting rocks is very common. See Chris Enstone's post about his Rival hitting a rock. They have a saying there that if you don't hit rocks then you're not trying hard enough. I hit an uncharted rock in Finland. Admittedly only doing 2.5 knots, but the result was a just a 1cm chip out of the gelcoat in the keel (a few more cm's across by the time the fractured gelcoat around it had been fully excavated and plugged with epoxy), and no other damage. If I'd been doing 5 or 6 knots, it wouldn't have been a very pleasant experience, but I'm quite sure the keel wouldn't have dropped off. Most people I spoke to there seemed to have hit rocks at one time or another.
So this idea that boats shouldn't/can't be designed to survive a heavy grounding seems a bizarre one to me.
Well I seem to recall a so called Scandinavian rock basher (HR42?) that broke up in minutes after grounding in the entrance to a drying harbour (in Scotland?).
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Dunno the details of that incident, but being continually pounded by breakers on a lee shore is a completely different thing to running into something hard on a one-off basis. As mentioned, in Scandinavia, hitting rocks is very common. See Chris Enstone's post about his Rival hitting a rock. They have a saying there that if you don't hit rocks then you're not trying hard enough. I hit an uncharted rock in Finland. Admittedly only doing 2.5 knots, but the result was a just a 1cm chip out of the gelcoat in the keel (a few more cm's across by the time the fractured gelcoat around it had been fully excavated and plugged with epoxy), and no other damage. If I'd been doing 5 or 6 knots, it wouldn't have been a very pleasant experience, but I'm quite sure the keel wouldn't have dropped off. Most people I spoke to there seemed to have hit rocks at one time or another.
So this idea that boats shouldn't/can't be designed to survive a heavy grounding seems a bizarre one to me.