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#1
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Does anyone know this boat??? (AKA my ideal design)
A few pieces of background: My wife and I want to buy a sailboat on which
we'll live full time and cruise the Caribbean and perhaps the Atlantic. We'll be alone, but may have frequent guests of a couple and perhaps kids, though most likely not. Circumnav is not currently interesting, but we never know! For a variety of reasons, we'd prefer to keep it as small as possible, but recognize that bigger can mean easier in storage, space and livability terms. So, given that many years ago, a 40' boat was "huge" we'd like to keep it there or less, but might have to give in to another foot. We started with the footprint and basic concept of a Morgan Classic 41, but changed several things. Here's the 'design specs' on our ideal boat: Topsides: Good locker space - probably the entire stern in lazarettes, plus propane locker and dink fuel locker, and anchor locker/chain locker (perhaps a fairlead to chain locker under the V to lower and move aft the weight??) Space for windlass not interfering with locker - perhaps lazarette equivalency (fenders, dock lines, sails??) Raised toe rail to capture water directed to fills after rinse and plugged scuppers Sloop or ketch rig, keel stepped, dual headsail/removable inner forestay rig/running backs. If ketch, independently stayed spars Center cockpit - enough back to sit comfortably, enough cap to provide for belowdecks headroom, relatively narrow footspace to provide bracing when heeled, seats long and wide enough to sleep topsides, majority of deck/sole removable/hatch to engine room, main traveler on stern cap Abundant hatches - could be shoebox, standard Bowmar-type, FG with light translucence, but all with opposed/switchable hinges. Objective: ventilation, emergency exits, security from casual attack Abundant opening ports - ventilation, light Bow and stern stainless rails - port, starboard and stern entries Jack lines and other harness clip points, including the cockpit Set up for singlehanding Interior: Minimum 6'-4" standing headroom in all walk or normal stand areas (not seating), minimum 36" seating room in any seating or berth space V berth (guest) forward, with no head but some hanging and fair drawer storage, below/cave storage - if bow design included lazarette/lockers, wide foot space comes free Inline salon with forward bulkhead-mount drop table, flip-out to full table for settee with astern L. If two settees, parallel orientation for table efficiency, or individual seating opposite L settee Storage behind/over and under (tankage?) settees Offset companionway to allow wider galley, astern L settee Galley athwart, full reefer and sink (to engine room astern) butting astern to workroom, forward dry storage with drawers amidship, overhead storage both athwart, propane locker outboard Nav opposite galley Single walk-through head and shower behind nav, engine room removable full access panels, drop-seat for shower convenience Opposite head (other side of engine room) workroom, tools and storage with removable full access panels to engine room, with entry door from aft cabin Stern cabin berth athwart, minimum 6'-3" deep inline to allow sleeping ahull under way Engine room accessible from tool/work room, walkthrough head, aft vanity, cockpit deck Hull: Sheer, or close to it, stern for best use of space, or sugarscoop 45* or less entry bow (less overhang), again for space efficiency per length Relatively straight or slightly flared sides (no tumblehome) to the rub rail/deck joint Wide Fin and skeg rudder or severely modified full keel - a scheel keel would be nice! Sea chest or equivalent water intake and minimal output through-hulls About 6' draft (5 to 7?) What do you know that looks like this??? Thanks. L8R Skip and Lydia |
#2
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Does anyone know this boat??? (AKA my ideal design)
Skip Gundlach wrote:
A few pieces of background: My wife and I want to buy a sailboat on which we'll live full time and cruise the Caribbean and perhaps the Atlantic. We'll be alone, but may have frequent guests of a couple and perhaps kids, though most likely not. Circumnav is not currently interesting, but we never know! For a variety of reasons, we'd prefer to keep it as small as possible, but recognize that bigger can mean easier in storage, space and livability terms. So, given that many years ago, a 40' boat was "huge" we'd like to keep it there or less, but might have to give in to another foot. We started with the footprint and basic concept of a Morgan Classic 41, but changed several things. Here's the 'design specs' on our ideal boat: Topsides: Good locker space - probably the entire stern in lazarettes, plus propane locker and dink fuel locker, and anchor locker/chain locker (perhaps a fairlead to chain locker under the V to lower and move aft the weight??) Space for windlass not interfering with locker - perhaps lazarette equivalency (fenders, dock lines, sails??) Raised toe rail to capture water directed to fills after rinse and plugged scuppers Sloop or ketch rig, keel stepped, dual headsail/removable inner forestay rig/running backs. If ketch, independently stayed spars Center cockpit - enough back to sit comfortably, enough cap to provide for belowdecks headroom, relatively narrow footspace to provide bracing when heeled, seats long and wide enough to sleep topsides, majority of deck/sole removable/hatch to engine room, main traveler on stern cap Abundant hatches - could be shoebox, standard Bowmar-type, FG with light translucence, but all with opposed/switchable hinges. Objective: ventilation, emergency exits, security from casual attack Abundant opening ports - ventilation, light Bow and stern stainless rails - port, starboard and stern entries Jack lines and other harness clip points, including the cockpit Set up for singlehanding Interior: Minimum 6'-4" standing headroom in all walk or normal stand areas (not seating), minimum 36" seating room in any seating or berth space V berth (guest) forward, with no head but some hanging and fair drawer storage, below/cave storage - if bow design included lazarette/lockers, wide foot space comes free Inline salon with forward bulkhead-mount drop table, flip-out to full table for settee with astern L. If two settees, parallel orientation for table efficiency, or individual seating opposite L settee Storage behind/over and under (tankage?) settees Offset companionway to allow wider galley, astern L settee Galley athwart, full reefer and sink (to engine room astern) butting astern to workroom, forward dry storage with drawers amidship, overhead storage both athwart, propane locker outboard Nav opposite galley Single walk-through head and shower behind nav, engine room removable full access panels, drop-seat for shower convenience Opposite head (other side of engine room) workroom, tools and storage with removable full access panels to engine room, with entry door from aft cabin Stern cabin berth athwart, minimum 6'-3" deep inline to allow sleeping ahull under way Engine room accessible from tool/work room, walkthrough head, aft vanity, cockpit deck Hull: Sheer, or close to it, stern for best use of space, or sugarscoop 45* or less entry bow (less overhang), again for space efficiency per length Relatively straight or slightly flared sides (no tumblehome) to the rub rail/deck joint Wide Fin and skeg rudder or severely modified full keel - a scheel keel would be nice! Sea chest or equivalent water intake and minimal output through-hulls About 6' draft (5 to 7?) What do you know that looks like this??? Thanks. L8R Skip and Lydia Irwin 41 or 43 |
#3
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Does anyone know this boat??? (AKA my ideal design)
From: "Skip Gundlach"
Subject: WORMS!!! Date: Monday, September 22, 2003 10:28 AM Howdy... You'll note that my 'mailto' and reply addresses are a uga address. That's a forwarding from my first account, which people going back into the early 80s have, so I've kept it alive as a destination, and as a means of knowing when a usenet communication is coming (via the account to which it's posted). However... Any of you desiring to communicate with me off-list should do so at (my name, all one word) @earthlink.net. That's because... One or more of the newsgroups in which I participate has one or more who have been infected with the current MS worm, and it's overloading my mailbox with 150k messages at the rate of a couple hundred an hour. So, I've blocked the engr.uga address, which will bounce all mail coming to me through that address... Yes, I'm protected, and no, it didn't come from me (or it wouldn't be going to uga, as all my mail goes through either the mindspring or earthlink servers). I do daily virus definition and other updates, and dump the infected file automatically, so it never even gets opened in my local computer - but it's overwhelmed my ISP server, and I'm perpetually over quota! We'll return you to your normal programming shortly :{)) L8R Skip |
#4
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Does anyone know this boat??? (AKA my ideal design)
On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 14:30:35 GMT, "Skip Gundlach"
wrote: /// One or more of the newsgroups in which I participate has one or more who have been infected with the current MS worm, and it's overloading my mailbox with 150k messages at the rate of a couple hundred an hour. /// Skip You are not alone in this..... Brian Whatcott Altus OK |
#5
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Does anyone know this boat??? (AKA my ideal design)
x-no-archive:yes Brian Whatcott wrote:
On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 14:30:35 GMT, "Skip Gundlach" wrote: /// One or more of the newsgroups in which I participate has one or more who have been infected with the current MS worm, and it's overloading my mailbox with 150k messages at the rate of a couple hundred an hour. /// Skip You are not alone in this..... I'm having the same problem, except that I've forwarded all the mail to pocketmail with a rolling mailbox. So I clear it out before I go to bed and then again in the morning when I wake up and I don't have to fire up the computer to do it (this is important because we don't have electricity yet). I haven't yet decided whether or not to go to another address or not. grandma Rosalie |
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