Greenheart
Well-Known Member
I stepped gingerly onto the Osprey's gunwale in the trapeze harness for the first time during a gentle breeze last October, and realised what should have been obvious - that trapezing isn't actually a terrifying dice-with-death, it's only a more effective, exaggerated way of hiking.
The advantage is so undramatic, I'm aware that the old ineradicable problem of not having enough ballast to keep her upright, will show its face again.
Certainly the trapeze will help. If my 150lbs is almost exclusively to windward of the gunwale, it'll be more effective than the same ballast sitting on the sidedeck. But, maybe I can further increase the leverage of my limited weight, by widening the sidedecks?
The Flying Dutchman appears to have done this, very elegantly...I can't think of another reason why the gunwales bulge slightly...
...I hadn't planned to be so discreet about it...just a smooth hinged piece of ply which could flip out, to shift my weight another foot to windward...
...while the leeward board flips back in, rather than dragging in the water as the boat heels. Obviously they'd want to lock in position; they might even be linked so that the leeward board flips up when the windward one is pushed out.
The idea may also owe something to my liking for varnished ply.
Considering the extremity of the wings and racks that seem effective in popular classes, is this a workable idea, or terrible?
Please, don't bother to mention the 'benefits' of pie-eating, or female ballast, alluring though both may be.
The advantage is so undramatic, I'm aware that the old ineradicable problem of not having enough ballast to keep her upright, will show its face again.
Certainly the trapeze will help. If my 150lbs is almost exclusively to windward of the gunwale, it'll be more effective than the same ballast sitting on the sidedeck. But, maybe I can further increase the leverage of my limited weight, by widening the sidedecks?
The Flying Dutchman appears to have done this, very elegantly...I can't think of another reason why the gunwales bulge slightly...
...I hadn't planned to be so discreet about it...just a smooth hinged piece of ply which could flip out, to shift my weight another foot to windward...
...while the leeward board flips back in, rather than dragging in the water as the boat heels. Obviously they'd want to lock in position; they might even be linked so that the leeward board flips up when the windward one is pushed out.
Considering the extremity of the wings and racks that seem effective in popular classes, is this a workable idea, or terrible?
Please, don't bother to mention the 'benefits' of pie-eating, or female ballast, alluring though both may be.