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#1 |
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Commercial Vendor
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The Bouncing Bows - Why Didn't You All Tell Me?? :)
Ok,
I saw a very large, new 47-55ft cat today pounding up the Chesapeake with me. Its bows were *leaving* the water completely on every other wave, while mine were flailing skyward. I've been asking about this for a long time, but got very few responses. Is this a weakness of cats that nobody wants to admit or talk about?? This is certainly how they are all designed and the bows fly up skyward, pivoting about a point somewhere near the helm/companionway door. It was very dramatic (and dare I say worse!) on this large, newer cat I was motoring into the slop with. BTW: The slop was so bad (or bow flying was so bad) it shot my forward cabin sole into the air, then down into the bilge below where it normally rests. I also took water over the bridgedeck - every 10th wave or so. Rough stuff. Very steep. |
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#3 |
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Commercial Vendor
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#4 | |
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Registered User
![]() Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Eastern Seaboard
Boat: Searunner 34
Posts: 358
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Quote:
By the way, it's nice tracking your trip. are you going up the eastern shore side or the inland side?
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Regards, Maren The sea is always beautiful, sometimes mysterious and, on occasions, frighteningly powerful. |
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#5 |
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Registered User
![]() Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Marlborough Sounds. New Zealand
Boat: Hartley Tahitian 45ft. Leisure Lady
Posts: 8,047
Images: 102
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Lightweight combined with double the positive bouyancy of having two bows.
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Wheels For God so loved the world..........He didn't send a committee. |
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#6 |
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Registered User
![]() Join Date: May 2004
Location: Ontario
Boat: PDQ32 & Leopard 38
Posts: 121
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I think you will find it varies depending on hull design however in general the absence of that big chunk of lead does mean you ride more on the water rather than through the water. It is usually only an issue when motoring directly into the wind and waves. When under sail you usually take the waves at an angle which makes for a smoother ride.
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henryv |
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#7 | |
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Commercial Vendor
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![]() I really do think it's all sailing cats. This was one of those new, expensive 47 foot type cats. Plumb bows, long, very thin, fine entry. Point that into the slop and it took off like a rocketship. It actually did worse than mine. I wish I knew the model. I just can't tell them all apart yet. They all look kind of the same to me still. The bows were literally way up out of the water every other wave. They were so far out, I could see the flat underside of them, about 1/4 to 1/3 of the down the boat's length. The sterns didn't leave at all. They just sat tight - just like mine do. It was also pivoting about on an axis by where the helm was. Just like mine does. Henry: Yes, it only happens motoring into the slop. We were motoring into some pretty harsh conditions. It is a motion I am getting used to, but something that nobody else seems to have picked up on. Maybe there aren't so many who went from a large cruising mono to a cruising cat? Is that why I'm picking up on it? |
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#8 |
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Commercial Vendor
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a Photo
Well, being that we were getting thrashed about a bit, here is the only photo I was able to snap, singlehanded with no autohelm.
Of course, the bows are coming back down (damn digital cameras), but you can clearly see the pivot point at the companionway door and the undersides of these plumb, fine entry modern bows as they are out of the water. All sailing cats do this, I think. It behaved just like mine and it's brand new. |
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#9 | |
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Registered User
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You traded a mono for a cat. You got to take the good with the bad. Just pulling your chain Sean, Good luck Paul |
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#10 |
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Moderator
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Minneapolis MN
Boat: Searunner 40 Trimaran, Siruis 22 mono, 16 foot MFG daysailor
Posts: 509
Images: 82
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I would say it's is a handling characteristic. Heading into a short steep chop is probably the most uncomfortable conditions for a cat. Overloading or improper weight distribution can make it worse but it will always be there to some degree. It could be that coming form your monohull experience that the quick motion fore and aft is something you are not used to and maybe not expecting. A few people that make the switch never seem to get used to it but it does seem that most do and find it an acceptable tradeoff. Once you go cat you seldom go back, one could say.
I have seen a few instances where extending the stern, maybe incorporating steps can help especially on smaller cats. I have been in steep choppy conditions conditions with my tri but I have never had the cabin sole jump around. A trimaran is really a different animal with different handling characteristics but this is probably the most uncomfortable conditions for it also. Just saw the picture. The waves don't really look that bad but I know sometimes they don't come through in pictures. I think it's just the typical cat pitching motion.
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Don't trust your dog to guard your lunch. Patrick, age 9 Last edited by Steve Rust; 10-05-2008 at 17:28. |
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#11 | |
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Commercial Vendor
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They were wrong. My boat at least didn't leave the water as often as the plumb bows did. It pitched quite a bit and I took a quite a few waves over the deck (with water going all the way over the bridgedeck and landing in my dinghy), but my boat wasn't any worse than the huge, new one in the photo. In fact, it was slightly better, as it didn't leave the water entirely like that one did. Anyway, yeah... the sea state doesn't show up at all in that telephoto picture. We were actually about 1/2 mile apart. That is a bad digital zoom and doesn't capture the steep, short slop we were motoring head on into. |
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#12 | |
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Registered User
![]() Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Whidbey Island WA
Boat: Dragonfly 1000 trimaran
Posts: 811
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I just had an idea for your bows in the air problem. If your sterns stay stuck down, why not buy another boat just like yours, chop them in half crosswise and make a pushmepullyou out of them. Keep the one with 4 sterns and you're in business. Ees seemple! Steve B. |
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#14 |
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Administrator
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Nevis, West Indies
Boat: Island Packet 380 "The Belle of Virginia"
Posts: 2,069
Images: 11
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Sean,
If it's any consolation, I've just received a post from an Island Packet bashing to weather off Wolf Trap Light on the Chesapeake, with green water coming over the decks. Not a comfortable sail for any boat tonight!
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Hud s/y The Belle of Virginia, IP 380 Nevis, West Indies |
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#15 |
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Registered User
![]() Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Marlborough Sounds. New Zealand
Boat: Hartley Tahitian 45ft. Leisure Lady
Posts: 8,047
Images: 102
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Get some weight up forward Sean. How much chain do you have? If it is short duration, then you grin and bear it. If it is for awhile, you have to shift some weight around. It's all about balancing out your boat.
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Wheels For God so loved the world..........He didn't send a committee. |
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