Robin
Well-Known Member
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I think you'll struggle on this one. Cat capsize on cruising size vessels is largely a leftover reputation from the very early days and old boats like the Apache. Its way harder to turn over a modern cat than a modern mono of the same length. If you doubt it, look at the area under the stability curves to see the energy involved.
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My 'Cat' comment was a bit tongue in cheek knowing that Boatmike has a Cat. That said the AVS figs and stability curves are IMO somewhat irrelevant in the practical reality that capsizes are caused by wave action not by wind pressure, dinghies excepted of course. Given a wave of the right size, any vessel will capsize and as I understand it that is not influenced much if at all by ballast ratios or hull shape. How quickly a capsized mono will right itself is another question, but irrelevant in this discussion because a capsized mono with no keel left attached is going nowhere but glug glug glug!
I think you'll struggle on this one. Cat capsize on cruising size vessels is largely a leftover reputation from the very early days and old boats like the Apache. Its way harder to turn over a modern cat than a modern mono of the same length. If you doubt it, look at the area under the stability curves to see the energy involved.
[/ QUOTE ]
My 'Cat' comment was a bit tongue in cheek knowing that Boatmike has a Cat. That said the AVS figs and stability curves are IMO somewhat irrelevant in the practical reality that capsizes are caused by wave action not by wind pressure, dinghies excepted of course. Given a wave of the right size, any vessel will capsize and as I understand it that is not influenced much if at all by ballast ratios or hull shape. How quickly a capsized mono will right itself is another question, but irrelevant in this discussion because a capsized mono with no keel left attached is going nowhere but glug glug glug!