gfbalduc
Well-Known Member
Common wisdom says that a blue-water sailing yacht is best kept simple: less initial expenditure, and less money - and time! - spent on maintenance/repairs.
So far, sounds logical.
But then, when I started equipping my new(ish) pride and joy, I came up with a list of stuff which I rate as essential or greatly contributing to comfort or safety, which really leaves out only the very extravagant / too expensive items.
So, I would like to hear comments on my personal list of equipment I would not do without (I am not listing the obvious - like engine, sails, ground tackle - the mandatory - bilge pumps, liferaft, etc - and the non-techy stuff which does not break - charts, pilot books,...):
- Electric anchor windlass with manual fall-back (serious ground tackle is too heavy for me)
- roller-furling genoa AND staysail (staysail and deeply-reefed main can stand a LOT of bad weather!)
- chartplotter (not really essential, but I find it very handy when sailing shorthanded - not in pilotage situations, though)
- spare fixed GPS
- a substantial autopilot (with hydraulic drive unit)
- wind-pilot (saves energy on long voyages)
- Radar
- EPIRB and SART (in the grab-bag, wrapped in aluminium foil)
- fixed and hand-held VHF (the latter in the grab-bag)
- 3rd GPS (handheld, kept in the grab-bag)
- SSB with Pactor modem and a PC (for inter-yacht comms + email + weather info)
- spare aerials for VHF and SSB
- wind generator
- solar panels
- water-powered generator
- "smart" alternator regulator
- watermaker
- refrigerator
- a substantial battery bank!... /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
Indeed, most of the above is not essential, and in case of a massive failure sailing can continue safely without them, possibly at the expense of more stress for a short-handed crew, but there is not much I would deliberately do without, money notwithstanding.
So much for the "simple" boat. Heck!!
So far, sounds logical.
But then, when I started equipping my new(ish) pride and joy, I came up with a list of stuff which I rate as essential or greatly contributing to comfort or safety, which really leaves out only the very extravagant / too expensive items.
So, I would like to hear comments on my personal list of equipment I would not do without (I am not listing the obvious - like engine, sails, ground tackle - the mandatory - bilge pumps, liferaft, etc - and the non-techy stuff which does not break - charts, pilot books,...):
- Electric anchor windlass with manual fall-back (serious ground tackle is too heavy for me)
- roller-furling genoa AND staysail (staysail and deeply-reefed main can stand a LOT of bad weather!)
- chartplotter (not really essential, but I find it very handy when sailing shorthanded - not in pilotage situations, though)
- spare fixed GPS
- a substantial autopilot (with hydraulic drive unit)
- wind-pilot (saves energy on long voyages)
- Radar
- EPIRB and SART (in the grab-bag, wrapped in aluminium foil)
- fixed and hand-held VHF (the latter in the grab-bag)
- 3rd GPS (handheld, kept in the grab-bag)
- SSB with Pactor modem and a PC (for inter-yacht comms + email + weather info)
- spare aerials for VHF and SSB
- wind generator
- solar panels
- water-powered generator
- "smart" alternator regulator
- watermaker
- refrigerator
- a substantial battery bank!... /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
Indeed, most of the above is not essential, and in case of a massive failure sailing can continue safely without them, possibly at the expense of more stress for a short-handed crew, but there is not much I would deliberately do without, money notwithstanding.
So much for the "simple" boat. Heck!!