Rivers & creeks
Well-Known Member
Yep, I've seen your aft deck :encouragement:
Thanks, we're well chuffed with it
Yep, I've seen your aft deck :encouragement:
We also run with no main and have two furling head sails to choose from plus balance in the shape of a fully battened mizzen. It balances very nicely according to Mr Windpilot.I think a cutter rig with furling sails is a far better compromise, but I would say that.
It means extraordinary balance and the ability to run with almost no main if desired and yet plenty of power up front.
Well it was a bit of a disaster...
What really surprised us is we were sailing up wind in 20 knots of wind and the boat was heeled so the sea was just about five inches below the toe rail, if you have that you have to hang on with one hand making it almost impossible to get dressed, undressed or cook, the other thing was the seas were only two feet and downwind the boat was rolling,....
To put that into context we had a heavy displacement long keel with cutaway forefoot steel ketch and in 20 knots upwind it would heel 10 degrees it also wouldn't roll in in that tiny sea.
The end of our boom was about four inches from the mizzen mast so set correctly we could get a slot effect.
>The Gunfleet site gives displacement as 31 tonnes.
The figure I gave is what the owner told me, having looked it up he is wrong and you are right.
> Oysters are not known a rolly craft or being too light, so there may be a more fundamental design feature/flaw that makes the Gunfleet heavier heel so easily and so rolly.
I think the lifting keel, it's too light, a problem that Oysters don't have, Gunfleet is intending to build another version of the 58 with a traditional keel so thay may sort out the severe heeling problem.
Lifting keel too light? design flaw? severe heeling problem? I've never heard such rubbish! The Gunfleet 58 has a long ballast shoal keel and a steel centreboard for lift. Designer Tony Castro knows his stuff and this is a centreboard boat with no traits of tenderness even when pressed hard - and I have sailed the boat in excess of 30 knots TWS. The twin rudders furthermore give zero weather helm even when heeled hard, making her beautifully balanced. The OP does not mention what sail plan he had set for 20 knots upwind - with no helm load it's easy to sail over-canvassed since the boat does not tell you when to reef. Rolling downwind in 2 foot waves? I don't think so - did you have the CB raised? Board-down with 3 metre plus draft plus the twin rudders stabilises the boat beautifully. The Gunfleet 58 had truly remarkable performance and handling in my opinion and I'm happy to contest some of the misguided comments on this thread. Is the OP expecting to be asked back?
Lifting keel too light? design flaw? severe heeling problem? I've never heard such rubbish! The Gunfleet 58 has a long ballast shoal keel and a steel centreboard for lift. Designer Tony Castro knows his stuff and this is a centreboard boat with no traits of tenderness even when pressed hard - and I have sailed the boat in excess of 30 knots TWS. The twin rudders furthermore give zero weather helm even when heeled hard, making her beautifully balanced. The OP does not mention what sail plan he had set for 20 knots upwind - with no helm load it's easy to sail over-canvassed since the boat does not tell you when to reef. Rolling downwind in 2 foot waves? I don't think so - did you have the CB raised? Board-down with 3 metre plus draft plus the twin rudders stabilises the boat beautifully. The Gunfleet 58 had truly remarkable performance and handling in my opinion and I'm happy to contest some of the misguided comments on this thread. Is the OP expecting to be asked back?