CAPTAIN FANTASTIC
Well-Known Member
Thanks for the replies. I understand that most boats are capable of Ocean cruising from Shane's Caprice to that 19 foot flimsy JOG boat Sopranino. However a professionally designed and built cruising yacht turned upside down and sank. And I agree, that could happen to anybody and that is what bothers me. Not the risk I can accept that. In fact it is part of the challenge. J Wilson is a well respected yacht broker unless I have the wrong Wilson) and he stated that the boats in question were not designed for ocean. I was curious if he saw something in the design. He did answer with AVS and that I agree with 100%.
Tranona in an earlier post mentioned ballast ratio and that is the same thing and gives AVS (I think) I know that any yacht which is stable upside down is inherently at risk. The capsize ratio is published for many boats as good below a figure of below 2.0 for the parameters used in the formula. The Moody 33 and 34 and 346 are above that number. Lots of boats are well below the 2.0 estimate for capsize. I believe the Westerly boats a just below that number.
You do not have to sail Ocean to meet the conditions Angus Primrose sailed into. He was USA coastal I believe. Perhaps a day sail or two from a USA marina. How about the Portland race in the wrong time.
It seems I am making a big deal of this but I got my answer and I thank you sincerely. The answer is simply AVS from Ballast ratio and depth of ballast. The old designs were around 50% and 2 metres deep the new are around 35%. and 1.8 metres deep. Something had to pay for all that internal space, it did not come free.
Sorry to Hi-jack the thread. It was almost on topic though. Thanks again we agree (I think) that the ballast arrangement defines the yacht.
I agree with you in principle, that many boats have not been designed to meet current ocean criteria requirements; but people have been crossing oceans for centuries on all kinds of crafts; technological improvements gives us the opportunity to produce more suitable designs for harsh environment, able to sustain more punishment and to produce deterministic designs rather than probabilistic and therefore determine where the risk is and to reduce it.
On paper, the Discus has better ratios making it more suitable for ocean crossing, however, we all agree that just a good design is not enough, judgement and handling are equally as important. The Moodys have an excellent safety record, but if I had to choose a boat to go out in force 10, I would probably choose a more robust and fit for purpose design.
I much appreciate all replies and I hope to get more discussions on the designs and to hear from others who have used the Moody 33 and the Westerly Discus in difficult and challenging sea conditions.
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