Little Rascal
Well-Known Member
PS were you able to pump out while still afloat and get back into anything like normal trim?
I agree that the risk is extremely small. But for anyone who can read French, here is an article reporting on someone who survived because he did have a boat with positivie bouyancy (I don't like the word "unsinkable").Fascinating discussion - but need to get back to basics. How many people have died because their small yacht sank in circumstances where unsinkability might have made a difference?
I would suggest that there is an additional practical difficulty - ensuring that the structure itself is strong enough to withstand the water pressure.The practical difficulty would lie in making the hatches and seals properly watertight.
You may find that you'd rather just go for a sail, of course![]()
I would suggest that there is an additional practical difficulty - ensuring that the structure itself is strong enough to withstand the water pressure.
It is one thing to make a watertight seal on - for example - a storage space under the fo'csle bunks. It is something else for that space to withstand the force of a couple of tons of water on top of it.
Sealing a space and making it watertight doesn't necessarily mean it is strong enough to act as a flotation chamber.