Thanks. Just read up on it. I've learned something today.Very common on big boats. The sheet goes to a winch.
Thanks. Just read up on it. I've learned something today.Very common on big boats. The sheet goes to a winch.
What a terrible design. I cant believe CNB didn't place it at the helm like 99% of other boats with the same system. That could have been the difference between life and death for them.Thanks.
It's a button control on the mast below the gooseneck or at least was back in 2019. Don't think it was ever changed. Meant you had to push the button and control the winch while holding on. It's one thing I did not like and hence the discussion with Anne-Marie and Volker. Not saying that was/is the cause but just one thing I didn't like. It's ok in calm seas but I'd prefer it back in the cockpit when the stress levels go up.
I think all we can ever do is learn from crap like this and try and make sure it doesn't happen to us. Just sad to lose two lovely people and thinking of their families.
Here you go. Powered winch on cockpit floor. No track.Thanks. Just read up on it. I've learned something today.
Meant you had to push the button and control the winch while holding on. It's one thing I did not like and hence the discussion with Anne-Marie and Volker. Not saying that was/is the cause but just one thing I didn't like. It's ok in calm seas but I'd prefer it back in the cockpit when the stress levels go up.
I think all we can ever do is learn from crap like this and try and make sure it doesn't happen to us. Just sad to lose two lovely people and thinking of their families.
I'm not sure what kind of system this yacht uses, or if my experience is representative, but the furling booms I've worked with have required very strict management of boom angle and sheet tension when furling to ensure that the sail furls properly in the boom and doesn't start "walking" backwards or forwards. If this is the case, on a boat as big as this with a park avenue-style furling boom, the main sheet furling/mandrel may not be visible from the helm so someone would have to go forward anyway to keep track of the furling progress.What a terrible design. I cant believe CNB didn't place it at the helm like 99% of other boats with the same system. That could have been the difference between life and death for them.
except a shocking and no doubt traumatic experience.Also they got nothing out of this..
Hell, a Laser boom can kill you too: in an uncontrolled gybe it'll swing like a major league batter's bat.Not limited to large rigs. A J/35 boom can kill you just as dead as the boom on a 65-foot boat.
Failed boom vang. There is no topping lift on that rig.From the pics, shouldn’t that boom clear anyones head by a good amount, almost regardless of where they are standing, and if the wife was struck by the boom, she would be on the deck or overboard, how would the husband be hit by the boom helping her? Wouldn’t there be damage to that dodger and/or the lifelines if it dropped that low due to loss of sheeting and boomvang?
Does look like that, was just wondering how the dodger wouldn’t stop the boom on one side or the other. My questions aren’t meant to be leading or anything, never sailed on a boat like that, just genuinely curious how that could happen and how to avoid something seriously sad on a much smaller boat.Failed boom vang. There is no topping lift on that rig.
Yes, bigger is more comfortable but according to the spec, a CNB66 lightship displaces 31 tons!!! That is seriously big and at some point you hit the domain of diminishing returns...Do some passage making on a small boat then on a big boat and you'll understand why.
Very fuckin sad event that and upset many in the sailing world here . The forum discussions were very much like this thread but with some serious disrespect being thrown around .
Agreed. Two very lovely people who absolutely loved doing what we all love - sailing. They were living their dream. To be taken like this is just so sad and cruel.Very fuckin sad event that and upset many in the sailing world here . The forum discussions were very much like this thread but with some serious disrespect being thrown around .