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Freedom GBE

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Posts posted by Freedom GBE

  1.  

     

    "Interestingly, while the engine was running, the raw water flow out the exhaust went from a good heavy flow to a much lighter flow and hence why i checked the engine."

     

    Water must have backed up into your exhaust and into the piston chamber. Water wont compress. I would put money on the new head gasket.

     

  2. Paid and sent the email. The email bounced back with an error message saying it did not arive at some of the recipients,

    Anyway we will be on the start.

    What radio channel is the committee going to use?

  3. Crikey Erice that convoluted spaghetti you script as posts beggars belief.

    Try expressing your opinions in a format that most can decipher and maybe someone will actually be interested.

    Ok so you are special needs well enjoy it but give us a break.

    I know it’s a complicated world but that doesn’t mean you have a free pass to add to its complexities.

    Agreed. Except I always like what Erice says. You are very special Erice.

  4. Yes I'm disappointed that no video of the north head carnage has emerged. I suspected that it would be good to watch in the forecast conditions, but didn't realise that the torpedo bay wharf was closed and so couldn't get a good look (by the time I realised it was closed it was too late to get up to the top of nth head).

     

     

    At 2 minutes 40 we zip across.

  5. Freedom made it in one piece. The old wooden GBE is now around 43 years old. We saw some good speed in the gusts.  Reaching on choppy seas, angle of death, smacking into waves . We got in before dark.

     

    Well done to all the 8.5s especially Lucifer, driving it like they stole it.

     

    Good weekend all round.

  6. They reported 5+ meter waves. If it crashes through the hatch, I can imagine the force of the water and air inside the boat will be twice the height of the wave.

     

    Like the kinetic forces in the blow hole at Muriwai, it spews out water twice the height of the wave. That will pop any window.

     

    On some stormwater outfalls on the beach we construct air releases to stop our heavy cast iron covers  from popping.

     

    Might be worth having hinge type hatches closed on a mechanical fuse and a spring to let air out but not let water in.

  7. We left Fiji on a fastish cruising cat a few days earlyer than Essence.

     

    The forecast on Predict wind when we left Fiji was moderate westerlies for the last few days of our trip. The forecast changed about three days in to our trip, we got light easterlies all the way instead. We still had a dream ride down.

     

    We could see this storm on the predict wind maps when were about half way, from memory it was following about 400 miles behind us. Essence had possibly left Fiji already when the forecast changed. Then hoping to go around the east of the storm. Waves could have slowed them down.

  8. I look on the water for danger, seldom look up, Anchor lights, steaming and even stern light are useles to me. Red port and green SB light on the bow is all that I look for. The new LED ones are superb compared to the old bulb ones.

  9. C

     

    Mostly agreed, except for liferaft. fire is your biggest risk...

    Cat 3 is only used for short coastal racing.

     

    Racing. We dont cook on board , got our hands full.  Engine fuel and outboard  is in central pod which is surounded by water. Unles we fire a flare at the petrol tank. catching fire is near impossible.

     

    Cant afford a proper life raft. We have to carry a blow up tender tied to the front trarmp which catches the wind when flying a hull upwind and sends the bow under water downwind,  They are a hazard.

     

    When we cruise we usually dont take a tender and pull the boat up close to the beach.

    • Upvote 2
  10. Cat 3

     

    Very happy that elctronic flares are now acceptable. Reduces the risk of fire in my opinion, well done. When is the next review?

     

    Four kilos of fire extinguishers. We dont have an engine room, 500 grams  by the switch pannel and a few buckets in each hull is all we need.

     

    Liferafts are a waste of time on our wooden catamaran.

     

    Never used our echosounder. 

     

    Our bilge pumps always blocks up. A bailer and bucket is much more reliable and should be an option.

     

    Almanac is just clutter.

  11. Are these things hard to change course or something? (see pic below post)

     

     

    Multis are easyer to change course down than Monos. Monos lean a lot and the rudder is on the edge. We have two rudders one is usually in the water.

     

    We never cleat the traveler and ours is 4m wide, it never runs out of track due to apperent breeze, it needs to be freed instantly in case of a gust and change in wind direction.

     

    Dipping a boat does make you go a lot faster, but you can see where you are going.

     

    Going above another boat is not an option, we cant see the lower hull and pinching kills VMG.

  12. The harbour is only getting narrower, more boats and faster. 50m is silly and not possible to enforce.

     

    Saturday afternoons, Wedesday night races and Coastal Classic start are days that there are large fleets of racing boats and its only been a good wind this saturday. That is less than 1% of the time the harbour is used predominatly for racing the rest of the time its cruising boats and ferrys.

     

    Ferrys have been very obliging and I would buy them a drink any time.

     

    Some of these large displacement, trying to plane launches are not nice.

     

    A multihull is more likely to dip a boat, often we signall to cruisers not to tack because dipping does not loose us a lot of VMG and we try and be nice. I think Multihull sailors are misunderstood a little.

  13. Cant wait to get out there on the SSANZ 100 miler. What are the rules if we see whales ahead? We just dip I suppose, by how far? We can lift the boards up.

     

    Dolphins etc see us coming but these whales are unlikely to see us right?

     

    100 boats might scare them away which will be ashame.

     

    I also hope all ships are looking out for them. I think they have to slow down in the Hauraki Gulf. 

    • Upvote 1
  14. Good words Idler. Slow down is not in our vocabulary often enough. The turtle often wins the race.

     

    I am very suprised to hear how many died. Possibly got swept away, could not hold on to the hulls. We are never inside the hull when we are flying a hull but you might actually be safer in the hull during a capsize.

     

    We have a set of jack stays that we can turn over onto the bottom so that we can tie ourselves and gear onto the hull, not if but when we capsize.

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