Nomad Willy
Guru
Sailboats will not only roll w/o their rigging and ballast but pitch energetically too.
Most sailboats are skinny at both ends probably to promote efficient running w light winds. It works it seems as most boaters know it takes very little power to drive them. When I re-powered my Willard I sold my Perkins engine to a man w a 40’ sailboat. A 107 cu.in. Diesel hailing from WWII and English taxi cabs wasn’t much power. I never did see the man again but I assume the Perkins was power enough .. and after all it was “auxiliary” power.
And the sb hull is rather speed restricted w her fine ends. Good for speeds well below hull speed but rec trawler skippers are rarely satisfied BELOW hull speed. And the high efficiency of the fine ended sb dosn’t extend to hull speed motoring.
I had a lot of thoughts about converting a sb before I bought a 30’ Willard. I didn’t find many sailboats w full ends and I can now only remember one.. the 27’ and quite popular Albin sb. They have the rudder ahead of the prop tho.
Generally stay away from ballasted boats and find a center board boat. But lead ain’t cheap so a ballasted sb may turn a good coin selling the lead. Or keep it for possible use as bilge or bow ballast. You may want a bit of bow ballast to keep pitching down to a tolerable level.
But concentrate on the full ended hull. And avoid sb’s w a wide stern and skinny bow. They have undesirable directional issues quartering seas.
Most sailboats are skinny at both ends probably to promote efficient running w light winds. It works it seems as most boaters know it takes very little power to drive them. When I re-powered my Willard I sold my Perkins engine to a man w a 40’ sailboat. A 107 cu.in. Diesel hailing from WWII and English taxi cabs wasn’t much power. I never did see the man again but I assume the Perkins was power enough .. and after all it was “auxiliary” power.
And the sb hull is rather speed restricted w her fine ends. Good for speeds well below hull speed but rec trawler skippers are rarely satisfied BELOW hull speed. And the high efficiency of the fine ended sb dosn’t extend to hull speed motoring.
I had a lot of thoughts about converting a sb before I bought a 30’ Willard. I didn’t find many sailboats w full ends and I can now only remember one.. the 27’ and quite popular Albin sb. They have the rudder ahead of the prop tho.
Generally stay away from ballasted boats and find a center board boat. But lead ain’t cheap so a ballasted sb may turn a good coin selling the lead. Or keep it for possible use as bilge or bow ballast. You may want a bit of bow ballast to keep pitching down to a tolerable level.
But concentrate on the full ended hull. And avoid sb’s w a wide stern and skinny bow. They have undesirable directional issues quartering seas.