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Another one of those J boats going down.
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Here she is (pic)
()
A JV53. Must be something about that part of the alphabet.
Paul L
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Another boat abandoned after rudder failure!
Oh, yeah, it took them only two hours to decide to call for a tow
Here she is (pic)
Another one of those J boats going down.
Yeah, good one. Not a J Boat at all, but sure is a performance boat too.
It does boggle the mind that these things break in benign conditions.
Yes, sure would be good to read an after the fact report in a lot of these cases
The Brits do it right when investigating yacht disasters (link)
The German authorities will investigate this thoroughly as well (link)
You know, funny you mention "Ouzo" --I remember that very sad accident from a few years ago
People with photochromic glasses should read that report (link)
Wow, I just realized the radar reflector has been set wrong...
That's one of the good things about enclosed reflectors
Seeing radar reflectors set up wrong used to drive me crazy.
Radar Reflector Picture
Exactly what GeneC was saying
uh, thanks for the inclusion, but...
double catch rain
What I took away from browsing the Ouzo report (section on radar reflectors)
What I see (and probably most)
Gosh, I wonder what the Hiscocks would think about all of this??
Well, to start with they might be alarmed at the increase in shipping
Bottom line....
agree
Rick...
Proabably hard to see in the picture
BTW, a good source on radar reflectors
Re: It does boggle the mind that these things break in benign conditio
I remember a story of some Aussies last year...
A far cry from several stories one reads of
"The yacht was equipped with a deep and efficient rudder for optimal control at high speed. "
It's surprising the number of folks who think the emergency tiller is an amergency rudder. (nm) (link) (pic)
Deck cleats being pulled off.
No mention of the sea state, etc. ....
That part has me wondering also
lack of imagination on your part
Sorry Jerry -- also hard to imagine a ULDB racing boat with steel decks. ;) (nm)
Race boat need to have strong cleats
Many ULDB racing boats have no cleats at all...
Fast is fun --until it all starts to break apart :-) (nm)
Look at the link in Mike's post
Look at image #8 in 15. That shows the underside of the hull-deck joint
I think even with the softest hands on the throttle (link)
That's why one would rig lines on both the port and starboard sides to the mast or the main winches. (nm)
Or drag something behind the boat ...
Yes, or maybe to steer the boat by rigging something that would allow for sufficent control. (nm)
If the deck cleats had no backing, why would the winches?
My observation has to do with the bow cleats because of the position relative to hull deck joint.
In picture #8 I think you're looking at a sail track which is farther inboard, Larry
Doesn't surprise me in the least the cleats tore out, I suspect most of us would suffer a similar failure...