| Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Tornado]
#129506 01/23/08 05:09 PM 01/23/08 05:09 PM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | Looks very weak for the racking it will need to take. All welded alloy...so he's lost the temper strength at the weld areas. Yikes! Yeah, but from the first post, I thought it sounded like he is just going to "cruise" around the world -- not like he is trying to set a record or anything. I can't imagine "cruising" in that, though. It's going to be pretty hard to pick up women along the way with that coffin cabin. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif" alt="" /> | | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Mary]
#129507 01/23/08 09:14 PM 01/23/08 09:14 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA dacarls
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA | I saw Pen Duick IV sailing, the morning after she arrived a day ahead of Windward Passage's winning finish in the TransPac- at Diamond Head. We had sailed out from the AlaWai Harbor on a nice 27 ft leaner to the finish line to see WP come in early on a beautiful morning. Then I heard this sizzling noise and just to weather of us was PenDuick IV, looking like a huge grey spider on 3 sticks, screaming past us at way more than twice our speed, both full battened sails sheeted in tight, big jib drawing. Absolutely breath-taking I thought. Incroyable as they say in France! A chill went down my backbone, and I knew right then I would be sailing multihulls forever! Not to make a point of it (HAH!), Taberly sailed about 2 miles to weather, sailed around Windward Passage that was herself under full spinnaker and really hauling the mail. Taberly then put up his chute, passed WP easily, and ran way ahead past the Diamond head buoy. Then he repeated this "in your face" gesture, going back to weather, passing and jibing then popping his chute and zooming ahead WP a second time past the Diamond Head Buoy. I guess monohull sailors get furious about this kind of showing off. What, was he supposed to go as slow? I thought it was fantastic and thus changed my life. Nobody at the Waikiki Yacht Club liked this boat. The novice sailor under discussion would have done well to do some engineering research by looking seriously at Taberly's excellent design. It looks awful to me: I was there and have seen the real Elephant.
Dacarls: A-class USA 196, USA 21, H18, H16 "Nothing that's any good works by itself. You got to make the damn thing work"- Thomas Edison
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: SurfCityRacing]
#129508 01/24/08 03:43 PM 01/24/08 03:43 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado OP
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | I'm heading up to the city Thurs. Who knows where it is? Looks like East Bay somewhere from the pix. I don't know a boat yard in SF with that many weeds in the background. Vallejo, Berkeley, Oaktown, Alameda? I'll go check it out if someone let's me know. I think I have a bead on location for you... Napa CA
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Tornado]
#129509 01/28/08 09:35 AM 01/28/08 09:35 AM |
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 297 rexdenton
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Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 297 | It hope he can find only flat sea...I would question the potential for severe torsional stress in an ocean swell. It is my hope that he gets a few engineer's opinions before taking his design into blue water.
Nacra F18 #856
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: dacarls]
#129511 01/28/08 03:47 PM 01/28/08 03:47 PM |
Joined: Feb 2003 Posts: 77 Tiger
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 77 | I saw Pen Duick IV sailing,... Tabarly, Eric Tabarly. A God in France. He is the one who started the whole thing. | | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: erice]
#129513 01/31/08 05:22 PM 01/31/08 05:22 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 215 Ohio TeamTeets
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 215 Ohio | He is an author by trade... http://worldcat.org/oclc/60783049And pictures from his story... turning this into this His website says he has "US Coast Guard 200 Ton Masters license and has sailed forty thousand miles offshore" He already knows how to get rescued!
Mike, Ohio Former H16, H18, N20, N17, M4.3
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: TeamTeets]
#129514 01/31/08 08:17 PM 01/31/08 08:17 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 851 US Western Continental Shelf hobiegary
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 851 US Western Continental Shelf | Mike Teets, I must admire your observation of "he already knows how to get rescued!" This guy is obviously depending on being rescued from the mess that he is weaving for himself. It is very evident that he knows how to create a spectacle of himself and then get rescued. Here is a noteworthy thread of discussion that I found to be quite interesting. bulletin board All of the twisting forces that will be applied to his "ship" could possibly be absorbed by a laced and tied configuration used by our early ancestors. But to hard-weld some aluminum struts together and expect them to endure the weathers of the high seas, without testing or proving, is just a ridiculous undertaking. I dream and hope for the day that Mr. Vann proves me wrong. But as a catamaran sailing explorer of my own frontier, I have to say that this guy is acting irresponsibly. It appears to me that I did more testing, on a proven design, to visit a National Park that is within only 20-50 miles of my own country's shores, than did Mr. Vann in his plan to sail around the entire planet. If this guy ever gets afloat, I am afraid that he will get far too much attention for what he deserves. In my view, he deserves to be condemned for this feat, unless he is asking to be considered, contemplated, confirmed for his ideas and risk taking. If considered, contemplated his plan will certainly be condemned by his peers. Mr. Vann needs to request peer support, in which case he will certainly be grounded. Without the support of the sailing community, he should feel as though he is undertaking a dangerous risk that will likely result in the unnecessary risk of human life when those who care for his life will have to risk their own lives in trying to rescue him from the watery grave in which he seems determined to plunge himself into. Note that Mr. Vann has mentioned not one, but two suicides that motivate him to make this endeavor. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif" alt="" /> GARY for example
Santa Monica Bay Mystere 6.0 "Whisk" <--- R.I.P. | | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: hobiegary]
#129515 01/31/08 11:37 PM 01/31/08 11:37 PM |
Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 1,304 Gulf Coast relocated from Cali... TeamChums
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Posts: 1,304 Gulf Coast relocated from Cali... | I am not a boat designer but I cant help but notice that he used "I" beams and sealed them in to make his amas and hull. He is counting on enough bouyancy from the air space created by boxing that junkyard crap in. For one, I dont think he calculated the weight vs bouyancy. He will have so little stability from those, I think the first time he takes any considerable wind from abeam, he will see what he is in for, if not capsize on the spot. Hopefully he will get this before going under the Golden Gate Bridge (he's in S.F. right?). Now my professional opinion of the design, manufacturing and material of the boat... He's [email]fu@#&d![/email] I have been a fabricator for 20 years and have EXTENSIVE experience with alluminum. His design consists of trusses. If he gets far enough to take some punishing waves for a long time, it will take it's toll on every weld joint in those trusses. The strength comes from combining all those joints together. When one cracks, another takes the load that it was bearing and not in the way it was intended. Then more will surely follow. I take some pretty stupid risks sometimes but I would't take that thing on a Catalina Island crossing. I hope for his sake, I'm wrong. But if you read the blog about his family suicides, this is just his way of doing it as well and getting alot of bublicity for it. In a nutshell; everyone is supporting his idea of a public suicide. I wont feel sorry for him one bit but I will for his family.
Lee Wicklund/Team Chums
Lee
Keyboard sailors are always faster in all conditions.
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: hobiegary]
#129517 02/02/08 03:39 AM 02/02/08 03:39 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado OP
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | Blog has been updated: TinCan Expected to do some testing in SanFran bay on Sat., 2/9/08, depart for Southern Cal Sunday 2/10 and stop in San Diego if needed, else continue on for a "lap" <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" /> " I’m willing to pull into a port at any point during the trip if the boat doesn’t seem safe or I just don’t feel confident. Contrary to what some folks on sailing forums seem to think, I’m not insane or reckless" He's being safe/cautious/careful and will take the time needed to be sure....Ya, right! Like letting his departure windows keep slipping by over 1 month while he hastily cobbles that crypt together. And, it's going be just fine 'cuz he's got buddies that will inform him if he's got bad weather coming, so he can put in and sit it out at the Cape, NZ etc. etc. Does he realize that things like radios regularly fail in those conditions? Even his breakfast cereal is trying to stop him! Wonder if he's had his appendix out? Gotta get someone in SanFran to get photos of this thing before it collapses. If by some miracle he makes it to SD, maybe I'll see him from my Tboat...I'll be at the Midwinters event out of Mission Bay 2/16 & 17.
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Tornado]
#129518 02/02/08 05:05 AM 02/02/08 05:05 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | When you are in the souther ocean you can't just run and hide of a bad weather system. Land is often just to far away and it blows like stink there all the time ! Additionally, running high through the south Atlantic to avoid the roaring 40's and screaming 50's forces you to sail through the St Helena High pressure system (=no wind) of the coast of Africa. You can get becalmed for weeks there. People are known to have gone insane by only a few days of being becalmed.
Therefor I would call such a safety policy a fundamental flaw.
Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 02/02/08 05:05 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Wouter]
#129521 02/02/08 11:04 AM 02/02/08 11:04 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado OP
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | I like the statement that he's taking the time to do a few more"safety improvements" to the craft...putting a couple of stays (he calls them "wires") from the ama bows to the main hull...and he's got all the engineering right because hese stays are angled right to prevent the amas from twisting the beams off.
This is hillbilly at best. Psychotic?
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Wouter]
#129523 02/02/08 04:49 PM 02/02/08 04:49 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD Keith
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Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD | People are known to have gone insane by only a few days of being becalmed.
Me thinks he has a head start in this respect... | | | Re: TinCan Tri
[Re: Tornado]
#129524 02/03/08 10:36 AM 02/03/08 10:36 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I like the statement that he's taking the time to do a few more"safety improvements" to the craft...putting a couple of stays (he calls them "wires") from the ama bows to the main hull...and he's got all the engineering right because hese stays are angled right to prevent the amas from twisting the beams off.
This is hillbilly at best. Psychotic? Now when the amas break off, if he has just enough chance to tack the boat, it will stay attached long enough to completely destroy the main hull too - great idea.
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