Sea Devil
Well-Known Member
so when it is all too awful and you need to be lifted out by helicopter what are you going to get into?
Michael - smiling!
Michael - smiling!
Get real Simon your advice is badly flawed I think if you sail
offshore without a liferaft it is irresponsible. Most offshore
cruiser i know and i would say 90% carry a liferaft or rubber
dinghy. Of course stay with the ship, UNTIL it vanishes under
you, thats the fatal mistake the yotties made in Fastnet!!
they got in the liferaft before their yachts sank.
God i hope you don't take family when you go cross channel
you can and the rest of you anti-liferafters argue all you like
Mine is not an opinion It is a Fact do not go boatingwithout one
Crikey i'm beating the drum this time!!!
Cheers tony
In PBO December 05 there was an account of how a guy set up his 21 footer for transatlantic. He took 8 self inflating flotation bags (250kg pos buoyancy each) instead of a raft - "my chances were highest if ... (I made) my boat into my liferaft".
Sounds like a good idea - what do people think? And if so why have I never heard of this before? We're only planning a channel crossing but it feels like the atlantic to me ... In a 24 footer there really isn't space for a liferaft where it would be easy to deploy.
And if people do think it's a good idea, anyone know where to source them?
But would the bags force the lid off the boat? Sounds unlikely but it's an interesting point - any techy experts know? Ours is a well built Trapper TS240.
Very topical in light of: "US couple who quit jobs to sail the world lose everything as their boat sinks two days into dream voyage" after hitting a submerged object.
Regarding sinking caused by the boat being holed: the impact is likely to be with the forward part of the boat or, if sideways-on, the bilges rather than the bottom I should have thought. Most cruising yachts have one or more large lockers under the v-berth in the bows, wouldn't it be a good idea to fit these with waterproof locker doors rather than the loose plywood panels usually fitted. Perhaps also the lockers under the side berths. Not to increase buoyancy but to contain and isolate water ingress to prevent the boat sinking. Suitable watertight locker doors are widely available in many sizes. e.g. https://www.marinescene.co.uk/category/1656/rectangular-hatch, Wouldn't help much if you were holed through pounding on the bottom and the keel driven up through the hull, unless you were in a twin-keeler with the keel bolts under the bunks.There was little mention of watertight bulkheads and lockers. . . .