MapisM
Well-Known Member
Wow, does SD support the RNLI in his spare time?The ballast was to stop her leaning over in a cross wind. The fin stabs ought to have done the job, but given their modest size and 7 knots of boat speed in a big sea they weren't enough. The ballast did substantially solve the problem
In none of the few occasions when the sea was big enough to make me reduce the (already low!) cruising speed of 8/9 knots, down to 5/6, I never experienced leaning due to cross wind.
Of course, the lower the speed, the less effective the stabs are, but even at 5 knots, in my boat they are still more than good enough.
Just a thought: since for each hydraulic system size/power, stab builders normally offer a choice of 2 or 3 fin size, aren't by chance available some bigger fins?
That's a relatively inexpensive upgrade, compared to upgrading the whole system.
I'm mentioning it because, on paper, the ballast could have made also the boat "harder" to stabilize, when the waves do gets her rolling.
In other words, she might be less prone to leaning on one hand, but also more prone to rolling, for any given fin size...
...though that's a bit of armchair naval engineering, of course!