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Must be one of those twin keel jobs. Looks like the short mast version...
Whale Sinks Yacht; Crew Rescued
Dramatic search and rescue news from Hawaiian waters this week. Mureadritta's XL, an ILC 40 that had just completed the 2006 West Marine Pacific Cup (2040 miles, from San Francisco to Kaneohe Bay), started back for Los Angeles on July 22. About 450 miles due north of the Big Island, she inadvertently got between a mother and her calf when encountering a pod of orcas. At least, this is what the crew thinks must have happened, because Mureadritta's XL was rammed so badly forward of the starboard chainplate that she is now resting on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. Pity about that pretty boat, but the important thing is that all four crew were prepared with both safety equipment and training. They evacuated safely to the life raft and were picked up by a diverted cargo ship today. They should be in Honolulu at some point on Friday. Antony Barran, M XL's owner and whose father, Nick, was among the four crew rescued, summed things up perfectly over on Sailing Anarchy: "Boats are replaceable; people are not."
Wednesday July 26, 2006
http://sailing.about.com/b/a/215996.htm
It is true tat some race boats have thin skins, which can be subject to puncture type damage, but I would think again before assuming they are not strong..at least the good ones, anyway.
Keep in mind that race boats are designed to sail with rig loads that would frighten most cruisers. It is not uncommon on a 40-43 foot race boat to carry 7000 pounds on the backstay in breezy upwind conditions, and to do that and not turn into a banana, they need VERY strong structures. If a boat flexes or bends more than the littlest bit, the shape through the water is distorted, and performance is severely impacted. Not to mention sail shape changing with each wave impact, and other speed robbing effects.
In fact, race boats, if they are successful are VERY VERY strong so that they can maintain the designed shape while carrying massive rig loads, and bashing into big seas-all the while being pushed much harder than a cruiser would.
Some of the spectacular structural failures we have read about lately must be considered in the proper context:In these conditions, any cruiser would have long since backed off on the "gas pedal", reduced sail, maybe changed course to reduce wave impact, and made other adjustments to reduce loads on the boat, while these race boats were being pushed pedal to the metal when most of these occurred.
Of course, these failures represent design flaws, but in most cases, had these boats been on a delivery, or cruising, the failures would not have occurred, as they would have been loaded up so much.And yes-falures have occurred on some race boats in benign conditions-and these are the boats that really were under-engineered.
The point is that a succesful race boat must be strong in ways most cruisers never imagine, yet somehow manage to accomplish this without adding too much weight.
Also, an angry whale would probably do you in no matter what type of boat you are sailing on.:0305_alar
I know your comment was somewhat tongue in cheek, but I also know there is often the misconception out there that race boats by nature are inherently not as strong or safe, and I am just taking this opportunity to address and correct that.
Boats can fail structrally whether they are designed for racing or cruising-and both do-but the reason is not due to the inteneded use of the boat-generally it is either poor engineering or poor or faulty construction, and my feeling is that since race boats must be engineered with more attention to structural detail the good ones tend to be very strong indeed..I think