Most of these designs sport twin rudders, swing ballast keels , are built in aluminum, steel, wood and glass. They average a bit more depth than the HFM being mostly in the 31/2 ' depth range verses my 27" draft.
All the boats shown here are here now sailing about. Enjoy!
Similar type of swing keel boat but built in glass. I did not notice the family was taking the afternoon swim and shower.
French aluminum go any where twin rudder swing keel design. The twin dagger boards on the stern are used when going downwind for better control. They also use one to leeward when going to weather as they are slightly toed in as to give lift. Draft over 1 meter.
Nice sturdy sailing machine.
French Ovini sloop. Lots of these about . Shoal draft centerboard. Single rudder. This boat has the disease . TOO much stuff.Rachel speaks French and I don't. She learned it in high school. All the Frenchmen that I ask about their boats in English and sign language try and tell me about their vessels. It's lots of fun. They are all very nice to me . I have told Rachel my fantasy is to hook up with a French girl that only speaks French and cannot understand me, vs Versa. So she speaks French to me and we keep this illusion alive at times..... Works for me.
Would not want to bump over a shoal with this kind of rudder set up.
What a wonderful shape. This is one design I would love to sail on to see what's up.French, steel cutter , keel with twin out board daggerboards. Very old school hardware on deck so this boat has probably been everywhere. I'am not a fan of the daggerboard trunks so close to the outside of the hull as its very hard to see what's going on in between the two. Not much room. Most steel boats rust through from the inside out. Will look fine on the outside but poke at it from inside and bingo! There's a hole.
A big Dutch aluminum Centerboard sloop with a thick fairing on the intire hull that is giving problems under the waterline. Tons of small holes. I have seen this in plenty of aluminum boats. I'am not a fan of aluminum below the waterline. My neighbor in the Bahamas has a French built one off boat pulled up on his land. It's 31' long and has been corroding from the inside out with hundreds of small holes while up on dry land! Yikes! Not for me . I like glass over wood. Ask any one that has been out here sailing for years will say that glass over wood is the best, easiest to repair and maintain construction. Fiberglass is strong but not as strong as a good cold molded hull. Steel rusts from day one, aluminum can be an electrolysis nightmare and is not maintence free, fiberglass cored boats have to be built right and can be fragile if it's a lightweight design, classic wood is fine if you can do the maintence yourself but having grown up in a carvel planked ketch that always leaked, having sunk in a small French built plywood planked sloop with out a glass overlay I will stick to my system of heavy glass over multiple plywood skins. Solid glass can last forever it seems, but you have to hide it just like on a metal boat so you end up building the boat twice... Kinda. Plus solid glass sweats like a metal boat so if you are going to be in cold weather you have to insulate it too.
These sloops are very wide , light in weight built in core. They pound like crazy and make tons of noise,
But can be very fast if you know how to handle them. You cannot carry much in them either because of their light displacement. Many have been sailed all over the world in all oceans. I would love to do a cruise in one but they cost too much for me. I built the HFM in 1999 launched and sailing for $35,000.00 US $ so I would be short about $ 150,000.00 more for one of these beauty's.
Small steel sloop with a swing keel. This design has packed in a lot in a 31' hull. Draft looks to be 1 meter.
Wish we could lift the skirts on all these other world crushing shoal draft boats to see what's underneath but I will show you Hoggys bottom here again.
Just shows you that there are all kinds of ways to get to the same goal of shallow water adventuring.
No comments:
Post a Comment