NickRobinson
Well-Known Member
Perhaps. Seems about as adventurous as going hill walking in a school crocodile to me, but each to his own.
Hmm... where was your risk assessment? Did that hungry school crocodile have a current CRB?
Perhaps. Seems about as adventurous as going hill walking in a school crocodile to me, but each to his own.
Ha! Should have seen me sideways across my new pen in Falmouth when trying to get into it for the first time on Tuesday morning!
Not even I had the balls to look as if I meant to do that.
No, I have always found prayer before and strong drink after is the best way to face berthing in a new place with Hinewai.
I'm trying to work out why this thread has suddenly been resurrected?
There's a certain amount (no names) of justifying ones own choice of boat and that's not why I strarted the thread!
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I am trying to work out why so many people put 'long keel' as a really desirable aspect of a blue water boat? I am going to suggest that it doesn't make much sense any more when you compare it with lots of more modern fin keeled designs - and it might be argued that fin keels actually make a lot more sense.
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Sadly some people's opinion of fin keeled boats is based on the fat bottomed horrors that are produced for occasional light wind sailing, and whose performnce under sail is an (predictably) unpredictable nightmare of broaches and rounding up in the smallest of gusts.
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Since the thread has been resurrected I find funny you not having a prejudice regarding fin keel boats but having one regarding what you call "fat bottomed horrors".
That's not how I read it at all. Mr Morris is, I gather, professionally qualified to kill you and therefore doesn't really need me to defend him, but I read him as saying that fin keels are great but get a bad name from some poor designs.
What is that kill talk about? If you don't read it that way what are in your opinion those fat bottom boats he talks about generically?
What he wrote was "the fat bottomed horrors that are produced for occasional light wind sailing" which is clearly intended as a subset of fat bottomed boats.
That's not how I read it at all. Mr Morris is, I gather, professionally qualified to kill you and therefore doesn't really need me to defend him, but I read him as saying that fin keels are great but get a bad name from some poor designs.
But I can't issue the death certificate...Plus perform burial rites!
Our own Westerly is a very sedate lady compared to many boats. The shock and horror is that she has a spade rudder which guarantees that we are going to die according to some. She does have a fin keel though...
Thanks you Jumbleduck.
Reading this back I realise that what I meant people to understand and what I wrote didn't necessarily correlate when i referred to 'fat bottom' in a boat.
By fat bottomed fin keeled boats, I was referring to those boats with too much buoyancy carried too far aft. In other words, all the fin keeled boats that are made too fat in the beam and underwater sections towards the stern. Its usually done because it increases the accomodation possibilities dramatically, but makes them much less sea kindly.
And just to remind those who are new to the thread, I have owned and sailed long keeled boats. They often sail very well, but they are invariably slower and a pain in the proverbial for some of their handling characteristics.
My original premise was that there is nothing about a well designed fin keeled boat that won't perform equally well and almost certainly perform better than a long keeled anachronism. A properly designed fin keeled yacht, with a decent underwater profile, will track just as well, heave to properly, and stand up to her canvas just as well as any long keeled boat. In addition, she will be more easily handled under power and probably sail faster. What's not to like?
It seems I understood you well from the beginning in regarding to what you call "fat bottom boats" and I do not agree that they are ","invariably slower and a pain in the proverbial for some of their handling characteristics".
And just to remind those who are new to the thread, I have owned and sailed long keeled boats. They often sail very well, but they are invariably slower and a pain in the proverbial for some of their handling characteristics.
>First of all you can get almost any boat to broach if you abuse it enough.
Have you ever broached in a long keeler? I haven't and have never heard of one doing so and why would anyone abuse a boat.
>Too much sail up downwind and losing concentration on the steering will make even the most docile of long keeled boats round up.
Many heavy displacement long distance boats use a wind vane, as we did, so concentration doesn't come into it.
>I meant to imply inappropriate sail plans with too much sail up for the conditions, and yes I have managed to broach in a long keeled boat. Just fly a spinnaker in too much wind and lose the steering.
The normal mistake with a broach is to fly a spinnaker and full main in too much wind, there are films of that with racing boats. We went downwind with a twin headsail twistle rig, no main and a reefed mizzen sail. Most boats take the spinnaker down at night but with a twistle rig you have an infinite range of sizes when reefing. I really don't understand why somebody would abuse a boat with the wrong sail plan unless they are inexperienced or just plain stupid, if the wind starts picking up reef.