Poor man’s passagemaker

Discussion in 'Boat Design' started by Milan, Sep 24, 2010.

  1. apex1

    apex1 Guest

    Well after reading most of the threads during the past 5 years, I assume I know how the majority here thinks about such boats.

    And I am for sure not the advocat of a "poor mans passagemaker" as I quite often have made clear. It is just not possible.
    You either have a capable vessel which cannot be cheap, or you don´t.

    You must not convince ME, I know what such a vessel must provide, because I did my miles and decades out there.
    The results can be seen here:http://www.boatdesign.net/forums/boat-design/perfect-passagemaker-style-within-genre-34092-24.html
    and in the 3 related threads. Which were the birthplace of this thread btw.

    I fully concur that most boaters think the wrong way when focussing on things they believe they would require, but overlook the real important factors.

    Regards
    Richard
     
  2. Pierre R
    Joined: May 2007
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    Location: ohio, USA

    Pierre R Senior Member

    I wasn't trying to convince you Richard. I was re-enforcing your statement.

    I think the better sense of balance that you possess the more naturally suseptable that you are to motion sickness. I have a very good sense of balance and I don't take motion comfort for granted.
     
  3. apex1

    apex1 Guest

    Thanks Pierre.

    That is a interesting thesis. Though my experience is the opposite. But that is just valid for myself of course. Although having a stiff ankle after a motorbike accident, I am very surefooted and have a good sense of balance on top. But mal de mer is unknown, even when the sampan is standing upright on the prop.
    I always thought, and think, that travel sickness has to do with fear, rather than anything else.
    Anyway, one has to choose guests and crew carefully when long legs are planned, and these persons are part of the watch.
    I once was sitting on a flybridge for 16hrs in the cold rain, peeing in my trousers, because I could not leave the helm. My "crew", all "old salts" of course, was laying around down below somewhere and transforming the interior into a cesspool. Well, we learn............

    Regards
    Richard
     
  4. Pierre R
    Joined: May 2007
    Posts: 461
    Likes: 32, Points: 0, Legacy Rep: 458
    Location: ohio, USA

    Pierre R Senior Member

    And therein lay the problems with many so called great passagemakers. Until someone has experienced this up close and personal where there is no way to get away from it, comfort is often and afterthought. That is usually a signal to me on the posters level or experience right or wrong.
     

  5. masalai
    Joined: Oct 2007
    Posts: 6,818
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    Location: cruising, Australia

    masalai masalai

    As I usually get around to asking, and the answer for this thread seems to be, - going around the world -... It depends on where one is cruising and the sort of passages that will be made...

    WHAT WILL YOUR CRUISING REGION BE?.....
    My personal choice is what I am building... It suits my experience, aspirations and is basically close to shelter in a cyclonic storm region and capable of finding shelter up a mangrove fringed creek... I will cruise the edges of the Coral Sea, mainly around the myriad islands of that region.... Many options for an overnight or a longer visit demand a shallow draft and an ability to take the ground in the tidal change when at anchor...

    Therefore, a passage-maker is design dependant, as others have rightly mentioned, FIRSTLY on crew competence/reliability, then on a design suited to the cruising region by an experienced and competent designer... This is where hull form and loa and weight are considered and how significant a role sails have in meeting this need...

    Boating can be pursued on a small budget but the owner/builder must accept and adhere to the limitations of that design consideration... Live-aboard cruising can be done on a limited budget by being "seaworthy-aware" and sailing within their personal as well as the vessel design limits...

    My choice is a lightweight sailing cat with twin saildrives (WITHOUT SAILS and associated deck-gear as money is short) and has a cruising range of around 4000NMiles at around 6 knots... (LOA=40ft, BOA=21ft, weight 5000kg approximately)... It will suit my skills, cruising region and present needs... Longest passage is 450nmiles (75 hours = 3days +), between shelter near Cairns, Australia and shelter near Samarai PNG... I should be able to "run" at about 9 knots if weather forecasts are "wrong"... I am not in a hurry, so I can wait for a 'weather-window', quite happily...

    It is all a matter of horses for courses and skill/competency/knowledge level of the "jockey"...
     
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