Keen_Ed
Well-Known Member
Happy Winter Solstice everyone!! It's at 23:03 here in Edinburgh apparently
It's at 23:03 UTC today everywhere on the planet.
Happy Winter Solstice everyone!! It's at 23:03 here in Edinburgh apparently
I also found that the spade rudder made she suffered from a fair bit of weather helm.
It's at 23:03 UTC today everywhere on the planet.
OK - what follows is purely my personal opinion, based on purely personal experience - it is not gospel.
Our previous boat was an AWB. Light displacement with a flat bottom and bolt-on keel. Also, deck-stepped mast and spade rudder.
We sailed her extensively over 5 years, in all kinds of weather, in the North Sea and the Channel area.
In that time we experienced plenty of slamming, pitching and at one point rig failure.
I also found that the spade rudder made she suffered from a fair bit of weather helm. You can argue that maybe I should pay more attention to sail trim (not my strongest suit), but crew is usually wife and kids. Frequent changes of sailplan are a no-no.
Things I all wanted to avoid in the next boat.
So, I wanted:
- skeg-hung rudder
- heavy displacement
- not a flat bottom with bolt-on keel
- keel-stepped mast
Arrived at this (apologies for the quality of the pictures - mobile phone).
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I have found that hardly any of the AWB builders offer the options, which I deemed to be essential. If modern AWB builders did offer boats which met my criteria I would have bought one. Others will have other priorities.
For me the criteria were essential - not the badge. If it had been about the badge I certainly would not have bought a Kalik as no-one seems to have heard of the brand.
Yes I should have included lead keel in my previous post.
So for me:
Teak deck bad
Expensive mahogany interior bad
Lead keel good
Don't laugh! Such things exist - hand made, slightly wavy round the edges, but the product of real craftmanship.
Those who argue that luxury brands bring additional safety to the table may also believe that luxury houses are constructed of “luxury bricks”, and nothing will disabuse them of their beliefs.
Looking good! You should start another thread with pictures of your refurb.
So slamming is bad. But as I said before new quality boats aren't all heavy displacement so they wouldn't necessarily be any different to the awbs.
Come on, tell us which awb it was before!!
average white boat
mankey auld boat
At risk of alienating some traditionalists I would like people's opinions on what is the real difference between say a Bavaria Cruiser 33 and a Hallbergh Rassy 342.
...
I just bought a 1994 boat and have probably spent 50% of its purchase price on new sails, prop, etc etc
So what is the best AWB hull??!!
£11k per annum. Good grief. How on earth do you manage that? My 26' boat costs me £200 in insurance, £150 for swinging mooring, £550 for winter storage, £75 for sail overhaul and £100 for engine parts, antifouling and so on annually. A grand a year, ish.
i am assuming that whereas my boat did not come with (for example) a wind indicator, or even VHF, a quality yacht would include this in the purchase price. I did hear a rumour that Northshore charged ridiculously high amounts for quite simple extras ( it is only an example) but i would expect an HR to be fully kitted & the gear to be more B & G rather than NASA so hopefully in need of less repair (at the start anyway)
No criticism meant but do you do not upgrade ropes, buy reeds every year, get an extra pilot book for an extended cruising area, get updated charts, a new card for the chart plotter, fill with fuel, loose a shackle or 2. buy some new spanners, replace some hoses. update the ssr, maintain the epirb, get new LJ gas refills,pay to berth on in a marina when visiting, buy new flares. get some new sailing gear at the boat show. change the autopilot because it broke 4 times. replace the wind indicator. Service the liferaft, get a replacement dinghy pump. new anodes, order a nw set of laminate sails
No of course it does not. We all cut our cloth to suitbut I don't think that boat ownership has to be particularly expensive.
I have enjoyed reading through this thread, very interesting and entertaining. However, as per the above quotation from your original post, I have 2 questions:
1. Which 1994 boat did you buy?
2. Which AWB hull is the best?
Apologies if these questions have already been answered, but I didn't see them answered as yet.
Kind regards,
Breizh
As to which awb hull is best I am no further forward. Modern quality boats seem not much heavier than the mass produced boats. I think slamming upwind seems to be the difference but no easy way to tell without trying!