nicho
RIP
Ten years ago, it was all the rage - boat tests droned on about it at length, but not mentioned these days.
Old news!. As a specific measure it has lost much of its relevance because stability is much more complex than one single measure and neither is it a particularly good indicator (on its own) of a boats capability. It came about because of a spate of designs coming on the market with low AVS and being used in conditions where ultimate stability was potentially an issue. New boat buyers now seem to be concerned about different aspects of design and assume (mostly correctly) that designers have done a good job, including meeting appropriate AVS figures for the category.
The answer Nicho is that AVS vanished.
I suspect that in the chase for increasing cost reduction by the BeJenBav builders et al, there is a bit of a conspiracy of silence about AVS or ballast ratios. Put more ballast into a boat to increase AVS and you have to have a heavier hull at greater cost, then a bigger rig to move it and so on. Can you charge more? Certainly Beneteau were for a long time very difficult about publishing stability data whether AVS or Stix.
There is some truth in what Tranona says. The average buyer wouldnt understand what AVS meant and what its significance was. To him it would just be a number and like the length of his willie, the bigger the number the better. But reality isnt like that. Capsize is an issue of energy transfer from the waves so not only is AVS relevant but so it height of topsides, cross section of keel, depth of keel, weight and many other factors. Hence the derivation of Stix
The answer Nicho is that AVS vanished.
I suspect that in the chase for increasing cost reduction by the BeJenBav builders et al, there is a bit of a conspiracy of silence about AVS or ballast ratios. Put more ballast into a boat to increase AVS and you have to have a heavier hull at greater cost, then a bigger rig to move it and so on. Can you charge more? Certainly Beneteau were for a long time very difficult about publishing stability data whether AVS or Stix.
There is some truth in what Tranona says. The average buyer wouldnt understand what AVS meant and what its significance was. To him it would just be a number and like the length of his willie, the bigger the number the better. But reality isnt like that. Capsize is an issue of energy transfer from the waves so not only is AVS relevant but so it height of topsides, cross section of keel, depth of keel, weight and many other factors. Hence the derivation of Stix
Interestingly that is the trend in magazine boat tests (more properly reviews rather than tests) as they tend now to spend less time on the technical aspects of design and more on trying to assess how well the boat meets the perceived needs of potential buyers.
On that related note. YM's "100 point boat test" didn't last long, did it? Perhaps they realised that a score which weighted "chart table" as highly as "seaworthiness" was a bit silly ... and that anyway the perceived needs of different potential buyer groups vary enormously.