oldbilbo
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What we need is some balsawood, an Xcraft knife, a bit of glue, several pints of beers, and a forum team to have a brianstorming session
I suspect you have that in inappropriate order.....
And yes, legs can be hollow....
What we need is some balsawood, an Xcraft knife, a bit of glue, several pints of beers, and a forum team to have a brianstorming session
I've no idea how high the centre of gravity is on a Cutlass, but they draw 4'6" and have a 50% ballast ratio. If I guess at it being bout 5' above the bottom of the keel, that means it can heel about 35 degrees before the centre of gravity passes over the point of contact between the loaded leg and the mud. Just before that point, I guess nearly all the weight of the boat will be on the leg and beyond that point, it will fall over anyway.
Oh, BTW, I'm also visualising what something made up of epoxy-laminated multiple ply might look like. 'Twould probably take a nice coat of varnish better than some angular hollow section aly tube..... Just musing....
There's a thought, you could box in your Ally tube to stiffen it up and then add the extra functionality - ladder etc., and stable flat hull pads.Laminated ply could also be hollow.
The dimensions of mine are very similar, except for the boat beam. What you say just doesn't happen. I doubt if we have ever heeled more than about 5 degrees. Provided the legs are splayed out a bit, which they always are with the Yacht Legs design, all will be well. Yacht Legs have been in existence for many years and I know of no examples of a boat falling over on them. Their experience is obviously far greater than mine, but they say the same.