Come on guys......"rounding the horn" ??? Seriously ?? Is that the standard we are going to use for if a vessel is sufficiently seaworthy ????
I would bet that 90% of the forum members have never been in 10-15 foot seas, and for good reason. Those conditions should be avoided. Even if your boat can handle it, your crew is probably flying home from the next port.
Do we expect our cars to be able to complete the Baja 1000 ????
There are lots of fine boats that are plenty seaworthy that only a fool would take to higher lattitudes.
CE ratings are an interesting way to compare boats and probably a lot more practical than can you round the horn in it.
Shoot, I kinda like that. The small size makes the pilothouse height a little out of proportion, wonder what it would look like at say 34'.
We should keep the thread going with other examples of small trawlers - the Interesting Boats thread seems to gravitate towards 50 or 60'+, too big for a lot of needs.
Fair enough, but in these various fora we have seen guys even mocking the CE-A rating, the highest they have in Europe. Some have tried to say that some CE-A rated boats couldnt even cross the Atlantic..
My comment was hardly a ringing endorsement of the CE rating system, I was just saying its probably more objective than random speculation of what it takes to transit the Drake passage by a bunch of people who haven't ever been there or have any training in naval architecture or have any experience with a vessel being overwhelmed by waves and wind beyond its capability.
I know some here have probably sailed there, and some have probably seen boats founder......but the majority of us have not. Even "can it cross the atlantic" is a ridiculous argument to have. Some very small boats have been successful, and some very large ones have failed. In some conditions any boat could do it, but in other conditions very few ships could.
I think to have a go anywhere, anytime, no matter what, vessel, you need a budget like the military, and more training than most civillians would be willing to get.
Please send some sites by builders, or pics. Im familiar with the neaerby Nova Scotia yard, AF. Theriault, who have built some of the those really great Cape Horn trawlers. Apparently they can build anything you want.
@JWell, do you have an email contact for AFT? I've tried getting in touch with them but to no avail. Perhaps covid has partially shut them down.
Their webpage always opens for me. Will check and try to send you.
I've called them but didn't get through. Do you have an email contact?
Greetings,
Mr. JW. You ARE becoming tiresome. Try a couple Valium and have a nap.
@JWell, do you have an email contact for AFT? I've tried getting in touch with them but to no avail. Perhaps covid has partially shut them down.
I've posted this design on previous threads on this subject, which is relevant to this discussion. This is 46ft x 19ft beam, 43 metric tonnes. The Gz on this design is 72° and the naval architect told me it could be modified for about 90° although we did not get into specifics of what changes would be made. I believe I chatted with @Hippo about this before, but IMO from a practical point of view, a powerboat with a 90° AVS should be suitable for any bluewater endeavor, which I think is similar to the Nordies and KKs. That angle of 130° is likely only reachable with sailboats or very highly specialized designs like Mobius, lifeboats and rescue boats.
"Ignore" is circumvented when others quote the troll.Maybe RTF, the best way is to y'all stop replying to every post, then he's just talking to himself, and might take the hint..?
Would consider if building in Al
The myriad NL houses as well as
Kanter - One of the best North-American aluminum builders. Canadian. Very good-looking boats
Alubat - smart designs and well build, from France
Alubat - currently building Denis’s LRCs
Garcia Yachts - France
Futuna Yachts - Also French
Boreal - French yachts
and Jacob Brothers of South Africa
Perhaps others here can talk about changing the purpose of a boat. My experience is converting a solo transatlantic racer to a cruiser. Although the result was seaworthy and fast functional payload was limited. Engaged NA for rough parameters as to what weight could be added and where. Would think converting fish boats to pleasure use would be equally if not more problematic. Again no one factor defines a boat’s behavior nor seaworthiness in survival conditions but purpose built boats tend to function better for the original purpose of the design. Commercial fishing is a very different function than pleasure cruising.
I knew there was a recreational example of a similar 40' trawler in NZ. Is this what the OP is after?
5000nm range
https://www.tradeaboat.co.nz/reviews/0711/windhaven-one-of-a-kind
View attachment 125633
I respect and appreciate people who spend their money on an extremely esoteric, crazy dream boat which likely no one else in the world will appreciate (like fatty or skinny above), but to think that someone is willing to pay you $400,000 for your weird brain-fart is even stranger than the boat itself.
40' and 35000 kg !!
To save fuel she don't play on the wl lengt and don't play on the displacement ...
Condemned to "run" at a very slow speed to be able to do blue water, they could save some weight if built in alloy ( around half of the weight of the hull if built in 8/10mm and 8/10 for this size it is "comfortable" .
This one choose exactly the contrary way
light/narrow (not too much), longer wl, less draft,twin engine and at 8kts 1lt/nm
14% less consumption for + 60% speed....
https://www.yachtworld.fr/yacht/2003-ang-trawler-56-4574469/
Ok the first one with 6mm stell hull could be more "bullet proof"