Mudisox
Well-Known Member
What a long and argumentative thread.
I've read though the whole thread, amazingly without falling asleep.
All my experience can add, [and it has been in a variety of boats, yachts and ships in pretty appalling conditions of both wind and sea states, [5 hurricanes/typhoons and even the 87 'gale'] is that it is the sea state, that is important not the wind. You can mentally picture what the wind will do to your windage, and steady waves/swells are less of a problem than waves that come from all directions.
There is no one single answer to fit all. My own observation is that above 70 kts or so the wave tops are blown off as spume, and few waves will break.
My most hair raising and worrying time was in almost flat conditions passing between Ortac and Casquets when the Channel flood at Springs were met by the North going CI water. It felt that the boat went through 40-50 degree aspects in all direction as a response to irregular waves possibly standing waves. It only lasted 15 mins to crawl through under slow engines, but I can't imagine that a drogue/ parachute would have been of any use. Stupid I know but I now will avoid those areas on charts.
I have also hung onto parachutes and also streamed warps, but in different shapes of vessel. But one thing is for sure, length matters, despite what some might think. It allows stretch, and that helps to absorb the forces. 600m stretches more than 100m, note metres not feet. Recovery is not so much of a problem if you are not in a hurry and allow the seas / wind to calm down.
Back to bed then.
I've read though the whole thread, amazingly without falling asleep.
All my experience can add, [and it has been in a variety of boats, yachts and ships in pretty appalling conditions of both wind and sea states, [5 hurricanes/typhoons and even the 87 'gale'] is that it is the sea state, that is important not the wind. You can mentally picture what the wind will do to your windage, and steady waves/swells are less of a problem than waves that come from all directions.
There is no one single answer to fit all. My own observation is that above 70 kts or so the wave tops are blown off as spume, and few waves will break.
My most hair raising and worrying time was in almost flat conditions passing between Ortac and Casquets when the Channel flood at Springs were met by the North going CI water. It felt that the boat went through 40-50 degree aspects in all direction as a response to irregular waves possibly standing waves. It only lasted 15 mins to crawl through under slow engines, but I can't imagine that a drogue/ parachute would have been of any use. Stupid I know but I now will avoid those areas on charts.
I have also hung onto parachutes and also streamed warps, but in different shapes of vessel. But one thing is for sure, length matters, despite what some might think. It allows stretch, and that helps to absorb the forces. 600m stretches more than 100m, note metres not feet. Recovery is not so much of a problem if you are not in a hurry and allow the seas / wind to calm down.
Back to bed then.