Kukri
Well-Known Member
Was there ever a Mayday call?
If one was made from the boat before the loss of the keel, it was not received. The EPIRB did not float free, but the activation of a PLB is a MAYDAY call in my book.
Was there ever a Mayday call?
If one was made from the boat before the loss of the keel, it was not received. The EPIRB did not float free, but the activation of a PLB is a MAYDAY call in my book.
Why were they (the crew) not in survival suits?
Why did it take so long for them (the crew) to identify the keel as the cause of leak?
I didn't spot anything in the MAIB report that indicated they had a longer range radio than the VHF. So given they had an EPIRB, PLBs and a sat phone a VHF mayday must've been quite a way down the list. If they didn't have time to grab the EPIRB and set it off then they didn't have time for the VHF.
You had to remove the saloon table to inspect the keel bolts..
...and they'd done this before they left so they were familiar with getting access.
...and they'd done this before they left so they were familiar with getting access.
If I recall correctly all they would have seen is the top of the grid/matrix, each bay had a base so they would not see any damage to the hull below that, just the top of the bolts. I assume that the top of the bolts might have also shown water spraying in as the keel worked.
What intrigues me is they reported the water ingress was getting worse in one of the Sat Calls. That is key to making a decision, not a visual of the keel bolts.
Note by saying this I am not implying that the skipper acted in anyway that contributed to the loss of the crew.
Indeed.
Lifting the floorboards and table could be a total red herring.
The liner might be intact and the water coming in around the leeward side of the liner, which is probably under the saloon berths, and probably has a water tank on top of it.
I have met a lot of Yotmasters who don't really understand a great deal of the stuff on their boats and how it works. Let alone how the boat is built and how it might fail.
The required knowledge of yacht engineering to get YM Ocean is pretty close to zero.
In practice most people in the trade have learned a lot on the job of course.
If I recall correctly all they would have seen is the top of the grid/matrix, each bay had a base so they would not see any damage to the hull below that, just the top of the bolts.
I assume that the top of the bolts might have also shown water spraying in as the keel worked.
What intrigues me is they reported the water ingress was getting worse in one of the Sat Calls. That is key to making a decision, not a visual of the keel bolts.
The liner might be intact and the water coming in around the leeward side of the liner, which is probably under the saloon berths, and probably has a water tank on top of it.
They were familiar but did they do it and if they did did they do it early enough in 5 to 6 M seas and winds of 30 mph plus.
If they had they would have seen the water in the bays and quickly determined where it was coming from.
I expect so, there were four of them, they were pretty highly motivated to find out what was wrong. Once they'd checked easier to check things like seacocks & perhaps rudder I'd have thought keel would have been the very next thing on the list.
Nope. There would have been no clue whatsoever where it had come from. That was the problem.
I don't know if they could have emptied one or all of the bays systematically to see if it was comping past the bolts but if they had exposed the bolt heads and there was water passing into the boat would you be able to detect movement of the keel in the bolt head just by holding it. I don't know just wondering.
But would the water have been coming in through the bolts, or under the liner and then out sideways into the boat exiting somewhere where the liner and hull join? That would be an almost impossible leak to trace. Especially whilst sailing upwind in 5-6m waves.
... in the dark, in blowing conditions... Boat jumping about, wind noise, boat noise, wave noise, water all over the place anyway...
I've had to hunt a leak in those conditions and I am here to (a) tell the tale and (b) admit that I failed to find it. I was 22 at the time...and was luckier.
We had actually fallen off a wave, cracked two frames and floors and the garboard was working. In smooth water the leak stopped and you would never have known anything was wrong.
Reduce sail OR de-canvas completely...
Chuck out a drogue....
Prepare the liferaft....
Find the leak....
Limp to nearest safe haven.
Or abandon.
Could be a completely different story.