Anonymous wrote:
Howard,
I am much in the same mind, dream of esoteric solutions like a proa, but the reality is that if you wish to enjoy sailing more than years of building you need to convert an existing boat. What is available will never be perfect, it will probably even be glass fibre. I have looked a couple of Iroquois, they are really a bit big for one person, I would say the upper limit.
Once you have decided on the boat, then consider the rig. A side by side twin mast has the great advantage that it is still within the capability on one person to raise / lower the mast.
Alleda is an example of a Mk 1, with simple flat sails. I believe she has sailed around the world, though prior to having the JR fitted. (I am sure a more elegant solution could be done for the mast support (apologies to the builder)
Mark:
The Gemini doesn't really fill the bill for what I want to do. Probably one of the best of it's era, it is still far too narrow with a beam of only 4.11M, it should be over 5 for that length to achieve what I would consider acceptable stability. Decent length beam rations begin with the beam at half the length. The Gemini's centerboards make great sense.... folding aft if they strike anything, rather than tearing a daggerboard case loose in the hull or snapping a dagger off. Mini keels do not offer the pointing ability of daggers or centerboards. They unfortunately had weak cases, and have been known to fail catastrophically, and there are a few other structural issues.... all of which can be addressed if one know about them and is willing. The beam of course cannot. At least they didn't push the deck all the way forward as so many cats of that era did..... which is reputed to exacerbate pounding issues, and supposedly can cause "submarining" if you surf into the back of a wave.
The bracing on the tabernacles on Alleda is as you say not exactly elegant, but when one looks at what it is called upon to do, that large tube probably makes sense. There is no trussing to keep things square. It appears to use the cabin top as part of the structure, but is there enough strength there to be of value??
In any case I saved those photos for future reference........ very interesting. You do what you have to do even if it is not quite what you want.
There is a Wharram....tiki 38 I think.... down in Oz or Nz with two strutted tabernacles that I've seen photos of.... but unfortunately didn't save, but of course that is a very wide boat, and the struts connect to the cross beam, and forward to the next beam. I should have learned by now to save everything........ when I want it I can't find it ;-(
Kohler and Woods, Simpson, and a number of others have done a good job with small cat design. Unfortunately the factories have gravitated to million dollar condocats, so we who want something smaller are pretty much relegated to the owner built market.... Which is not all bad. I have nothing against ply/epoxy construction........done right.
The FP Maldives 32 is about the only factory built boat that meets my criteria to any real extent. It is well designed for a boat it's size, and has the benefit of foam core above the WL, which is an asset in terms of condensation and temp control..... liveability. The biplane mast of course rears it's ugly head again.... The only location that makes sense is about in line with the original mast, and stuffing an 8" dia tube down through the narrow hulls right at a doorway through into a forward single berth, would severely restrict access, but in my case I could live with external primary access, and there are other options. One I've thought of more than once is a high strength thick wall smaller diameter piece of 7075 tubing down through the partner to the step, and projecting up inside the actual mast, combined perhaps with some strutting. Lateral struts could go to the original step, and longitudinal ones to some forward or aft strong point. The mast or tube I mentioned would go down right where the roll of toilet paper is in the first photo (port side looking forward). On the stbd side (second photo) that would be where the shelves connect to the bulkhead that divides the forward berth from the chart room. The topside shows a derth of obvious strong points, the mast step being the only obvious one. There appears to be a pretty substantial bulkhead at the aft end of the bridge deck cabin where you enter the aft berths... third photo.
There usually is a solution to this sort of problem. In this case a high strength stub inside the mast.........and perhaps a couple of struts each.
This is a boat that is fairly readily available, and not all that popular as you cannot stand up without the pop top open, and too small...everybody wants to have a crew of 6, but the low profile streamlined shape suggests better than average performance upwind due to reduced windage....... The shape is reminicent of the Iriquois without the "fanny pack". For me the galley up would involve some rethinking so I could sleep in a recliner right there facing forward with windows all around, two steps from the cockpit, and of course with the pop top open when in a warm climate... it's all doable....it all takes time and money.
H.W.