AndrewB
Well-Known Member
Curious, can you say why? I've used Fertan as a rust killer and found it reasonably effective.....Fertan was an initial error ....
Curious, can you say why? I've used Fertan as a rust killer and found it reasonably effective.....Fertan was an initial error ....
>No heavy displacement boats of any material are heavy displacement.
Heavy and Ultra-Heavy Displacement Hulls
With Displacement/Length ratios of 360 plus, ultra-heavy displacement hull styles have fewer devotees these days, though for passionate cruising traditionalists it's de rigueur. Heavy displacement sailboats of this type will have a full (or long) keel, which will bring with it some benefits - and some significant limitations.
The difference is GRP boats have a fin keel and heavy displacement boats have a long keel or long keel with cutaway forefoot, ours was filled with lead. Fully loaded our 38 foot steel ketch weighed 15 tons.
>No heavy displacement boats of any material are heavy displacement.
>> There are many long keel heavy displacement boats with GRP hulls and lead keels, mostly built in the 1960s to 1990s and some are still built today. There are also heavy displacement boats with fin keels and steel boats with fin keels.
So in your previous view there are no heavy displacement boats but now there are.
A fifteen tonne boat with only 3 or four tonnes in the keel doesn't sound like its within the normal ratio for an ocean going cruising boat. I appreciate that stability comes from form and ballast, but that ratio is a little on the low side by most people's standards and expectations.In say a 15 ton 40 footer a steel boat wil have more of its weight distributed through out the hull with maybe only 3 or 4 tons of ballast in the keel ,whereas maybe a grp boat of the same displacement will have more weight in the keel and in that way behave differently.
My Van de Stadt was designed in 1977. The design weight is 14.5 tonnes with 6 tonnes of lead in the keel. She has a fin and skeg hull with 2.2m draft. She is made of GRP. She has a theoretical 41% ballast ratio but with inevitable stores onboard that is not the same in the real world. We normally hit the scales at +18t. She never rounds up when sailing. She is fast when compared to other more modern yacht being used as liveaboards here in the Caribbean. Even loaded up she sits above her designers original marks as she was designed for living aboard. We see a few steel boats here in the Caribbean but not many. They are not that popular and they all seem to be slow. Of the few we have come across on-route, we sail right past even when they are longer than us. There seem to be few really good designs of steel boat. I guess if there were there would be a lot more of them. They might be good when you hit a reef but I can think of no other benifits of steel. I suspect I am not alone with this view or there would be a lot more steel boats about. There is enough to do to keep a liveaboard boat in good condition without the added headache of terminal corrosion.
I have exactly the same sentiments, backed up by the direct experience of currently owning both a steel and a GRP yacht.
I have no doubt whatsoever-as you have clearly " attacked " steel yachts-that Brent will be along shortly to put us both right..............................................
So why on earth did you buy a steel boat?
>First PLEASE use the "Reply with Quotes" function because I do not understand the point you are trying to make. What you write does not connect with anything because you have just preceded it with random sentences. . I have no idea how you can say what is in your post as nowhere have I (nor anyone else) said "there are no heavy displacement boats" - so who and what are you replying to?
I think posting a whole post is waste of space, > was used when the Internet and Web first came into existence and nobody complained then. All you need is the key point/s to answer a post, as above. There are two posters who wrongly said there are no heavy displacement boats Motor_Sailor and Peter Cooper look through the thread and you will see that, I am surprised you missed them.
>First PLEASE use the "Reply with Quotes" function because I do not understand the point you are trying to make. What you write does not connect with anything because you have just preceded it with random sentences. . I have no idea how you can say what is in your post as nowhere have I (nor anyone else) said "there are no heavy displacement boats" - so who and what are you replying to?
I think posting a whole post is waste of space, > was used when the Internet and Web first came into existence and nobody complained then. All you need is the key point/s to answer a post, as above. There are two posters who wrongly said there are no heavy displacement boats Motor_Sailor and Peter Cooper look through the thread and you will see that, I am surprised you missed them.
>First PLEASE use the "Reply with Quotes" function because I do not understand the point you are trying to make. What you write does not connect with anything because you have just preceded it with random sentences. . I have no idea how you can say what is in your post as nowhere have I (nor anyone else) said "there are no heavy displacement boats" - so who and what are you replying to?
I think posting a whole post is waste of space, > was used when the Internet and Web first came into existence and nobody complained then. All you need is the key point/s to answer a post, as above. There are two posters who wrongly said there are no heavy displacement boats Motor_Sailor and Peter Cooper look through the thread and you will see that, I am surprised you missed them.
>First PLEASE use the "Reply with Quotes" function because I do not understand the point you are trying to make. What you write does not connect with anything because you have just preceded it with random sentences. . I have no idea how you can say what is in your post as nowhere have I (nor anyone else) said "there are no heavy displacement boats" - so who and what are you replying to?
I think posting a whole post is waste of space, > was used when the Internet and Web first came into existence and nobody complained then. All you need is the key point/s to answer a post, as above. There are two posters who wrongly said there are no heavy displacement boats Motor_Sailor and Peter Cooper look through the thread and you will see that, I am surprised you missed them.
Because it was a real bargain.
Made from Corten Steel to a Hartley design by a very good welder, fitted out nicely with a sensible interior it was fully equipped and had been used as a liveaboard. First Mate and I day sail it when we are in NZ. When we return in November we shall have it lifted, antifouled, do a bit of cosmetic work and replace the windows.
Then, work done, the Marlborough Sounds!
At the exchange rate at the time-2014- it cost £4,000. It had an inflatable and outboard, liferaft and epirb, microwave, cooker, califont and electric heads. Spinnaker, four headsails, roller boom reefing, lots of cordage, solar power and a gas barbie on the rail.
Not bad for a fully equipped 32 foot yacht. After cleaning-that took a week-we lived aboard in the Marina for six weeks and day sailed regularly.
Now the boat is reliable and well set up, it is a cheap toy and a very usefull fishing platform.
The window apetures are rusting, as is the transom where the cockpit drains from through the gas locker. The forward hatch leaks in one corner.
When these issues are addressed in November/December this year she will be well up together-and for not much money.
For 4 months playtime every year, four thousand pounds was the right money, warts and all!
So you have an excellent blue water cruising boat ready to go for 4k. Many people have ended up owning a steel boat this way when they discover you can get a lot of boat very economically because of many people's fear of rust.
Many of the advantages of steel are not apparent until you go cruising off the beaten track. For example, I met a man last year whose grp boat was being lifted into its cradle and one of the pads was misaligned resulting in a crack in the hull which took a month to get repaired. If you are living aboard this is a serious inconvenience. This kind of thing just doesn't happen with a steel boat.