RHough
04-21-2006, 09:57 PM
All the talk about making multi-hulls from one or more mono-hulls has gotten me thinking ... (dangerous I know) :)
How about using boats that no one likes?
Two possibilities spring to mind. Using two MAC65's to make a 65ft cruising cat. Keep both rigs and lose the keels. Add daggerboards in each hull instead. The connecting structure could be pretty massive and still be lighter than the two keels. No need to build a centre cockpit or accomodation, just beams and a cat walk so you could walk to the windward steering station.
The other idea would be to take a MAC65 and two MAC26's and build a trimaran. One of the knocks on the 65 is small living space for a 65 footer. The 26 has lots of space for a 26 footer. The owners stateroom would be in the main hull, and the two amas would be guest cabins. I figure that the L/B ratio of the 26's wouldn't be a problem as I would expect them to plane (as designed). For long periods of trade wind sailing, the windward hull would carry water ballast to increase the RM. With a little bit of planning the boat could have three steering stations ... one in each hull ...
I'm leaning toward the big cat idea over the tri with planing amas because the biplane rig (I love biplanes) of the cat would give it a huge SA/D advantage in light air. Having a 150HP engine in each hull should double the under power cruising speed and range too.
If I can't find two matching 65's to build the cat from and have to go with the trimaran concept, how much bigger would the rig have to be to get good performance? To keep the mast height down, would a cat ketch rig or schooner be a good choice?
How about using boats that no one likes?
Two possibilities spring to mind. Using two MAC65's to make a 65ft cruising cat. Keep both rigs and lose the keels. Add daggerboards in each hull instead. The connecting structure could be pretty massive and still be lighter than the two keels. No need to build a centre cockpit or accomodation, just beams and a cat walk so you could walk to the windward steering station.
The other idea would be to take a MAC65 and two MAC26's and build a trimaran. One of the knocks on the 65 is small living space for a 65 footer. The 26 has lots of space for a 26 footer. The owners stateroom would be in the main hull, and the two amas would be guest cabins. I figure that the L/B ratio of the 26's wouldn't be a problem as I would expect them to plane (as designed). For long periods of trade wind sailing, the windward hull would carry water ballast to increase the RM. With a little bit of planning the boat could have three steering stations ... one in each hull ...
I'm leaning toward the big cat idea over the tri with planing amas because the biplane rig (I love biplanes) of the cat would give it a huge SA/D advantage in light air. Having a 150HP engine in each hull should double the under power cruising speed and range too.
If I can't find two matching 65's to build the cat from and have to go with the trimaran concept, how much bigger would the rig have to be to get good performance? To keep the mast height down, would a cat ketch rig or schooner be a good choice?