kapnkd
kapnkd
WOW!!! …Fast approachingWhile at the helm I tend to enjoy racing the boat. I've seen gps speeds of 9 and a max of 11. At the helm all seems wonderful. However when I set the autopilot and go below deck it sounds like a freight train! Often at night I visualize myself waking up floating in a pile of fiberglass splinters because I just beat her too hard.
Also up in the V-Birth is sounds like bombs going off when the water smashes against the hull. I wonder if some boats are insulated to reduce this noise or am I nuts pushing this vessel this fast across the atlantic? What is your speed limit?
50 years of sailing our ‘73 E32-II now. She’s sailed Florida’s East & West coasts and out to the Dry Tortugas as well.
In all that time, we’ve never had any doubts about her hull integrity - and that includes multiple extensive trips throughout the Bahamas including Gulf Stream crossings in up to 10 - 12’ seas.
Now residing in Michigan since ‘91, we’ve crossed Lake Erie end to end in multiple races pushing her hard in extremely short choppy nasty waves that made those Gulf Stream waves seem like an easy comfortable sleigh ride!
Never once in all that time and still today have we once worried about hull integrity.
That being said, we have also been very prudent with rigging and chain plate inspections/replacements along with the interior bulkheads with regards to inevitable deck leaks and water damage.
Bottom line, Ericson hulls are indeed SOLID, especially those early 70 models before prices exploded on the costs of resin in the mid 70’s. (Just cut a hole in the bottom for a transducer or speed indicator and be amazed at the hull thickness!)