Pete7
Well-Known Member
Looks a bit nasty in the Channel tonight, liferaft in the cockpit might be called for.
Pete
Pete
I agree with you but you missed my point about the dinghy being useful in a MOB situation if you have a high freeboard. That, IMO, is the most likely scenario where my raft would be used.
Interesting observations. Again if you look at the reported incidents what you don't find is any that involve children. Mum and dad + 2.4 on their summer cruise do not feature in survival situations - at least in coastal waters, although there are some examples (Douglas family comes to mind) of ocean founderings have involved children.My observation (from a limited dataset) is that people who feel responsible for small kids seem to be more likely to have a liferaft.
Having read the reports of the '79 Fastnet, and practised using a liferaft in a sea survival course, I think I'd work very hard to avoid ever having to use one.
I ran this pasta calculator, just to make sure
Trying your hardest not to sink in the first place is probably prudent.
cheaper to buy a new seago or try to get a better / lighter one from the forum or talk with Graham at Suffolk Sailing, Gt Blakenham
Trying your hardest not to sink in the first place is probably prudent.
+1
Does anyone else have a "damage control" bag on board?
Kindred Spirit was Cornish built like an absolute tank, plus the lower parts of the hull (and higher in the bow area) were filled with solid resin stuffed with steel scrap ballast. So I was fairly relaxed about hitting anything in her. Ariam is not under-built by any means, fairly normal for a late 90s AWB, but she feels lightweight by comparison. So, having recently re-watched the Crash Test Boat holing videos, I decided to assemble a bag of kit to tuck away in the emergency locker in case we ever find the water rising round our ankles. Contents include:
This sounds like a lot of stuff, but with the tarpaulin tightly rolled and the rubber sheet curled around the outside of it all, it fits into a medium-sized toolbag in a locker in the forepeak (near where any hole is most likely). Doubt I'll ever need it, but it's reassuring to have an answer to the question "what if?"
- A 4'x6' plastic tarpaulin, with ropes already tied to the corners, to pull over a hole from the outside. Big enough to cover any hole short of ripping the boat practically in half, but small enough to be able to handle in a hurry.
- A 2'x2' square of heavy rubber, to help seal over a hole from the inside. I'd back this with one of the saloon cushions, to form to the hull shape, then a plywood locker lid to press it all down.
- A 2'6" carpenter's clamp, reassembled in reverse so that it pushes outwards. Intended for holding a patch or bung against a hole, something they struggled to improvise in the video.
- Some extra softwood plugs, only because I found them on board after I already had some.
- Some really sticky squidgy rubberised roof-sealing tape
- A tub of plumber's putty. Copied from that American leak-sealing gunge, which appears to be much the same stuff.
- A tin of expanding foam. Not sure how useful this would be with a wet gap, but perhaps if pre-preparing a patch or sealing a hole above the waterline.
- A couple of wooden battens, pre-drilled with holes at intervals. Idea being to use them across the inside of a lost hatch or window (we have a fair bit of coachroof window area) and bolt down a locker lid against them from the outside.
- Pack of long bolts (studding with locked nuts on), nuts, big washers etc for putting the above plan into action.
- Spanners and a saw (folding pruning saw) for rigging the above without having to ferret in the bottom of the tool locker at the other end of the boat.
- Hatchet and screwdrivers for chopping away / neatly removing any sections of furniture that may be in the way of a hole.
I'm going to see if I can squeeze in a bigger bilge pump this winter, too.
Pete
all good common sense stuff. What's that got to do with the liferaft decision, as it makes little change to your chances of using it?
PRV:
Good list.
If somebody is on medication, or on the pill, a spare supply might be necessary.
Can you explain then why the majority of Sadler and all Etap yachts are rated for offshore sailing without a life raft being required? Surely if the powers that be dealing with boat certification held the same opinion as you the Sadlers and Etaps would require life rafts for offshore sailing.IMHO if your out at sea you should have a life raft.
Well bugger me - $7,100 stateside plus delivery to UK plus import duty plus VAT - nice concept though but not at that price.
My boat (an Etap) is unsinkable, but I still have a life raft. Because I understand although unsinkable they still burn.
Ditto yet again - 4 X 5kg CO2 extinguishers plus 2 foam extinguishers plus sea water pump and hose for use as fire hose - Oh yes and still no life raft - maybe if doing a transat or heading off to Iceland I would consider one for peace of mind.Ditto my Sadler. But I decided to spend the money upgrading my fire fighting equipment and still don't carry a liferaft. Each to his own.
Thread drift. Ed said "try your hardest not to sink", this is me trying.
Pete
Try getting them coded for commercial work and see what the powers that be say on having a life raft then. If I recall correctly it was only the Sadler 34 that was deemed unsinkable and that was though an accident of design rather than an concerted effort to make it so.Can you explain then why the majority of Sadler and all Etap yachts are rated for offshore sailing without a life raft being required? Surely if the powers that be dealing with boat certification held the same opinion as you the Sadlers and Etaps would require life rafts for offshore sailing.
Ditto yet again - 4 X 5kg CO2 extinguishers plus 2 foam extinguishers plus sea water pump and hose for use as fire hose - Oh yes and still no life raft - maybe if doing a transat or heading off to Iceland I would consider one for peace of mind.
Try getting them coded for commercial work and see what the powers that be say on having a life raft then.
If I recall correctly it was only the Sadler 34 that was deemed unsinkable and that was though an accident of design rather than an concerted effort to make it so.