Mike Crawford wrote:
| Many apologies for the delay. November through March
is normally my busy season with software development, and
this year I inherited two additional projects. Email,
group chats, and anything of the sort has taken a back
seat. Now that things have eased up, I have time to
ponder fast-and-light multihulls.
de nada.
But a warning before said silence might be nice. maybe. I
was worried I might have said something.
> So, after five months of time to ponder, I've
flip-flopped several times before coming back to my
original position.
>
> My personal goal:
>
> - A permanent retractable motor sled underneath
the ww hull, with the motor itself being aft of the
cockpit when retracted
> - A simple winch, crank, or even set of blocks
and a cleat, to raise/lower it
> - The motor is accessible for basic maintenance
from the cockpit
> - Tramps between the cockpit and the lw hull
>
> Reasoning:
>
> - This is the lightest, fastest, cheapest way to
go
> - I'll daysail 95% of the time without a dinghy
on board
> - I'd like to be able to expand/collapse on the
water without changing motor controls or moving the tender
> - There's more under-cockpit clearance this way
than if we try to cram the tender underneath
> - And drive a single unit onto a bunk/multihull
type trailer at any launch ramp
I wanna have a go at this, with the understanding we are
beating up an idea, not a person.
I object to a motor in the cabin.
1 It is a danger for fires and explosion, assuming gas
motor
2 I think most regulators (not strictly relevant to us),
for good reasons (see above) do not want enclosed engine
compartments.
3 Objectionable fumes for humans in the cabin. Some more
than others.
4 Prime cabin real estate regulated to low value engine
space
> - This is the lightest, fastest, cheapest way to
go
While an enclosed, well sealed and externally well vented
engine hole seems easy, it adds complexity and small cost.
Add the blocks and tackle and experimenting, and I am not
sure its much cheaper or lighter than a tender.
A simple sled should be easy though
> - I'll daysail 95% of the time without a dinghy
on board
I suggest the ex40 tender is very different to a 'dinghy
on board'. It's integrated and invisible, stupid easy to
deploy and retrieve, and, like a dingy, adds a backup in
case the boat is, somehow, disabled. That gives me a
comfort.
> - I'd like to be able to expand/collapse on the
water without changing motor controls or moving the tender
I think Rob addressed this.
Rob, 01Nov "a single line would winch the boat in and out,
with the tender locked in place. It could then be lifted
lowered as required. Or, the boat could be telescoped
with the stern down, even while motoring."
> - There's more under-cockpit clearance this way
than if we try to cram the tender underneath
I don't understand. the tender would only be underneath
while trailering, or deploying, right?
Rob, you had said "The above assumes internal (ww inside
lw) telescoping which will mean some changes to the deck
layout."
Did you mean lw inside ww? so the tender, between the lw
beams would slide under the ww hull?
Or would the ww inside the lw mean teh boat would need to
attach to the bottom of the lw beams?
If we did the 'side by side' beam layout, and then canted
them at an angle, such that, when deployed (opened), the
boat attached beams could 'lift' the tender for wave
clearance at sail, if needed, and still fit nice under the
ww hull. Of course the retracted boat might sit at a funny
cant.
More details to work out.
With a simple loosing of a line to deploy the tender
motor, and clear line of sight to it, clear space to work
on it, and it well vented and away from the cabin/guests,
it seems perfect to me.
But, if a under ww hull sled were to be long enough to
raise the engine outside the beams, you could have all the
safety of outside venting, no lost space in the cabin and
simple open and close.
And I thought you wanted a 60'?