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#1
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![]() She's certainly not a hot racer and any newer race boat will take a good 10+ degrees point off her. On the other hand, when a shout of "starboard" fails - a call of "17 tons of steel" generally gets attention. Peter, That was great. Thanks for the laugh. Many times I have been so glad that my boat was constructed of steel. Not being as competent a sailor as others on this news group, I tend to run into docks and run aground from time-to-time. After hurricane Floyd hit the coast of North Carolina a year or so ago, I rushed to my boat to assess the damages. As I walked down the dock I saw where the storm had pushed several fiberglass boats up against their pylons and severely damaged their topsides and rails. When I got to my boat, I found no damage at all. At first I concluded that my lines had held the boat off of the pylon. Then I saw the damage to the pylon. On closer examination there was not even a scratch on my paint. Then it dawned on me -- steel versus wood -- it's the wood that looses. Later the marina manager asked me to please not let my boat destroy their docks. :-) BTW how much and where did the builders "stretch" your Mauritius 43? Lee Huddleston s/v Truelove |
#3
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On Wed, 04 Feb 2004 05:38:09 GMT, (Lee
Huddleston) wrote: snip BTW how much and where did the builders "stretch" your Mauritius 43? Lee Huddleston s/v Truelove Sorry for delay in response - can't believe it's been three weeks since I last looked at the groups. Hinewai was built in New Zealand back in '85 and she's basically a 45' - we tell our marina she's a 44 since at 45ft the cost goes up - thankfully, they've never noticed the Aires at the flat end. The build with the steel is great - professional done - but the first owner obviously followed the mast plan religously - measuring back from the bow. This meant the mizzen ended up in the cockpit - about 1 ft from the wheel. Living the good life here in Oz meant this was not the most comfortable helm position for me (although my swelvt wife had no problems) so we moved the mizzen back onto the top of the stern cabin. That said, it's been the only issue on the stretch. We had the usual early Roberts issue with down wind sailing so moved the rudder back and added a bit in size. That done, she sails like a dream - easily handled by the two of us. And, as I said, while I respect JAX's views, frankly, she's the right boat for us. We're currently fitting her out for a circumnaviagtion - would welcome any feedback, suggestions, thoughts, experiences from Truelove. Our e - mail's peterk[remove this bit aimed at stuffing spammers]at oceanodyssey.net Best P www.oceanodyssey.net "Do not measure your life by the number of breaths you take, Rather by the number of times life just takes your breath away" |
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