Which Sailboat Keel is the WORST? Ep 233 - Lady K Sailing

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Lady K Sailing

Lady K Sailing

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 564
@ArtietheArchon
@ArtietheArchon Жыл бұрын
Shoutout to the Bilge Keel, the only keel you intentionally run aground because they are often designed to sit on their keels on the ground
@craigparse1439
@craigparse1439 7 ай бұрын
Full-on love for the Bilge Keel. No need to worry about anchoring when you can just beach it.
@itsoktobebeige
@itsoktobebeige 5 ай бұрын
Haha... I came to the comments to say just this too. Here on the east coast of England Bilge keel also now known as a double keel are the standard type for coastal sailing. Tides out, you beach your boat, take a nap and wait for some water. Cheap moorings too, as you don't need a deep water mooring.
@ralphe5842
@ralphe5842 3 ай бұрын
Well if you like sailing a tugboat
@itsoktobebeige
@itsoktobebeige 3 ай бұрын
@@ralphe5842 Only someone with an incredibly small penis would make a comment like this.
@Kayaz48
@Kayaz48 4 күн бұрын
I just discovered your channel a few days ago while looking up some obscure facts about boats, and now I am binging. I learn something interesting from every video, even though I’ve been sailing since 1964. You’re a GREAT teacher.
@LadyKSailing
@LadyKSailing 4 күн бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@usdohs
@usdohs Жыл бұрын
Don't blame me, you clicked this! 😂😂😂
@kylemaclachlan9209
@kylemaclachlan9209 Жыл бұрын
😂
@c.a.mcneil7599
@c.a.mcneil7599 Жыл бұрын
😂
@doodlegassum6959
@doodlegassum6959 Жыл бұрын
This comment deserves to be pinned
@RepellentJeff
@RepellentJeff Жыл бұрын
That is the internet in a nutshell.
@willmartin1837
@willmartin1837 Жыл бұрын
A lead keel…
@Daviddickson
@Daviddickson Жыл бұрын
I like my twin keeler because I don't need a cradle to keep it upright on the hard, where she spends her life waiting for me to finish restoring her! 😊
@Boatyarddog
@Boatyarddog Жыл бұрын
All the while being deformed from gravity sucking down the hulls. Finish it or sell, scrap it its meant to be sailed... NOT STORED😢.😢😢😢
@jonathansimmonds5784
@jonathansimmonds5784 Жыл бұрын
@@Boatyarddog Typical yank reply!! Not a clue most of you, even the guy making this video doesn't know what he's talking about.
@rcwardawg
@rcwardawg Жыл бұрын
@@jonathansimmonds5784 your first sentence just invalidated anything you have to say.
@Daviddickson
@Daviddickson Жыл бұрын
@@Boatyarddog Also, since you obviously don't realize these boats do quite well spending time drying out during twice a day low tides as they are designed for. Like yourself spending your days waiting for 4:20 pm to have a toke!
@jeffreyerwin3665
@jeffreyerwin3665 Жыл бұрын
Never owned one. Are you able to kedge off by healing the vessel over when you run aground?
@richard8651
@richard8651 Жыл бұрын
Having owned a number of sailboats with various configurations and not being a die hard racing sailor but rather a cruiser, the best boat for me was a cutaway full keel with a retractable (swing) 8:23 centre board. This configuration gave me the best of all choices, a easy sea manner, shoal draft, good pointing ability all by adjusting the swing keel!
@Luredreier
@Luredreier Жыл бұрын
I've never sailed modern ships. This sounds interesting. I wonder how full keels compare with the Åfjordsbåt I've tried when I was younger.
@TechnoGlobalist
@TechnoGlobalist Жыл бұрын
Wow I was just thinking something similar 🤔. But I'd combine a swing-keel with a fin keel with a winged ballast bulb (parallelogram linkage) whose angle of attack may be adjusted as required.
@langstonholland9272
@langstonholland9272 11 ай бұрын
Totally agree. I have a 42 ft. Hinckley Sou'wester with this kind of keel. 4 ft. 9 in. with the centerboard up, 9 ft. with it down. Tracks like it's on rails with the CB down.
@spidermoose
@spidermoose Жыл бұрын
A bathtub full of VW Beatles is my favorite 😄
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles Жыл бұрын
I just bought my first boat in February and boy did I have information overload when I first started looking. I chose the safe route of a full keel and had my eyes out for a cape dory 28 or 30, ALMOST bought an Alberg 30 in Florida to sail back to Texas, but ended up with the best boat out of all those with a Perry design, a Baba 30. It’s a solid(non cored) full keel with cutaway forefoot, inboard diesel, cutter rigged boat that weighs 12.5k with a 10.5ft beam and a 4.75ft draft. Older boat so had to do some maintenance and repairs so will be splashing this week and taking her on maiden voyage this weekend!
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
All of those boats are good examples of a moderate keel length, which is desirable offshore.
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 I would consider the 4.75ft draft mine has as moderate
@Mme.Swisstella
@Mme.Swisstella 2 ай бұрын
I just googled 'baba 30' upon reading your post. That is some beautiful boat, must say.
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles
@Monkeywrenchmotorcycles 2 ай бұрын
@@Mme.Swisstella thanks. The abundance of teak is both a blessing and a curse lol
@timothyblazer1749
@timothyblazer1749 Ай бұрын
The Baba is an excellent offshore boat. Congratulations!
@ickster23
@ickster23 7 ай бұрын
Best for what is the real question. Everything in boating is a compromise of one sort or another.
@robertoperezaguirreeliasca7559
@robertoperezaguirreeliasca7559 3 ай бұрын
Ask the naval arquitect! For speed? For stability? For navigating the seven seas? For offshore For Costal cruising? For competition? For safety? I like heavy displacement full keel
@WojciechP915
@WojciechP915 Жыл бұрын
I have a 1978 Oday with an encapsulated lead shoal keel with a centerboard. It is perfect for shallow the shallow bay where you run aground on shifting sandy shoals, without losing too much maneuverability on a bay with light wind.
@GreatCreative
@GreatCreative Жыл бұрын
My friend has a '79 O'Day 37. It's like a barge on rough water and cruises along in comfort. But try to do a standing turn in a marina? Yeah, about that barge...
@JohnEvans-lp9dc
@JohnEvans-lp9dc Жыл бұрын
The ending referencing the Delos keel was an excellent addition. Every boat is a balance of specifications. If you run a fin keel it would be wise to have excellent chart plotters and night vision cameras to detect flotsam or fishing gear and keep you off the rocks.
@dawntreader7079
@dawntreader7079 Жыл бұрын
get a grip. i've sailed my fin keel and spade rudder 25,000 miles. what you say makes no sense. you're an armchair sailor dude.
@theplinkerslodge6361
@theplinkerslodge6361 Жыл бұрын
You do a great job of guiding people away from "future-proofing" their decision. I have mellowed out, myself, over the years and learn to appreciate both the highlights and lowlights of anything. Unless one is heck-bent to be a top racer - tomorrow - there is much fun learning along the way, including the temperament of a boat. It is more important to learn your particular boat than buy the best spec'ed boat for your use.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
My Erickson 35 nearly killed me in 30' waves.
@theplinkerslodge6361
@theplinkerslodge6361 Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 Sounds like a good interview for Tim to do with you - bring some user experiences into the vids.
@conbertbenneck49
@conbertbenneck49 Жыл бұрын
If you want security while sailing, a full keel boat with the propeller in a rudder aperture is the only way to go. If you sail New England waters, there are lots of lobster pot warps and if you have a spade rudder, guess where the warps hang up. Now, how do you get the warp out of the gap between hull and top of rudder after it has jammed in their solidly - and the weather is deteriorating? (Remember MURPHY is always looking for the best opportunity to play his games) Propellers hanging out there are another place that finds every lobster pot warps. Then there are fishing nets..... I've seen the hole in the bottom of a Dufour 34, at a Connecticut Marina, after the fin keel hit a rock; tore off the keel; and the boat instantly sank. If you are sailing along at night, and hit a barely floating container that washed overboard from a container ship. Would you rather slide up on the container with your full keel, - with no damage - or hit the container with the leading edge of your fin keel while doing 6 knots .... shear it off, .... and immediately sink....?
@stephengeraghty3368
@stephengeraghty3368 Жыл бұрын
Says it all 👋👋
@jkutyna
@jkutyna Жыл бұрын
Full keel, sure if you want to discount several decades of engineering advancement and never go faster than 1kn. Oh yeah, throw in the fact that your maneuverability is less than non-existent. There's a big reason why marine engineering left full keels behind decades ago.
@conbertbenneck49
@conbertbenneck49 Жыл бұрын
@@jkutyna I'm a long haul cruiser. I'll gladly sacrifice 0.5 knot of speed for the absolute security that the full keel affords. The sea hasn't changed, and I refuse to put up with the modifications that the racing boys want. A Vice President in my Company was an ocean racer - he had the latest new fin keel speed machine design built. As they were approaching the Irish coast, having crossed the Atlantic, their fin keel broke off - bending stresses - leaving a huge hole in the hull. The boat instantly turned over - mast down - his crew climbed on the overturned hull and called the Irish Coast Guard. Nobody was hurt; they were towed into the harbor, but the boat was scrap. No thanks! I prefer hundreds of year of development of successful ship types to the current hot design fashion of today. With all oceans littered with semi-floating containers that went overboard from container ships, I don't want to have to worry about loosing a keel in the middle of the Atlantic, if I happen to hit one.
@pl7868
@pl7868 4 ай бұрын
@@jkutyna Don't stop learning tomorrow you will know it all an maybe even have some dates fixed 🙂
@Panoramix0874
@Panoramix0874 3 ай бұрын
@@conbertbenneck49 You are giving away more than 0.5 knots speed compared to the extreme racing fin keel that sometimes break off... Racing boats need to be sailed by competent and considered crew to be safe, that is a fact of life, if you push too hard, or don't know how to maintain it, you break the boat! OTOH, with small losses in performance you can design with generous safety factors a fin keel and it will work fine and be way safer than a full keel as the boat will be as sturdy but more manoeuvrable and able to sail to windward in bad weather including in short seas.
@harryvanhoo7235
@harryvanhoo7235 Жыл бұрын
My personal choice is a steel or aluminium boat with twin or bilge keels. Shallow draft, one keel is upright under way and easy to beach for maintenance and will stay upright if "beached" by accident and a very strong part is in contact with the land or reef. They are much quicker than most people realise also.
@AquaMarine1000
@AquaMarine1000 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget, Australia's Ben Lexcon designed the famous winged keel of Australia 2 the boat that won the 1983 America's cup.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
I was 33 years old in 1983. I had sailed my own boats on ocean crossings for 12 years in 1983.
@hxhdfjifzirstc894
@hxhdfjifzirstc894 Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 I sailed the Northwest Passage, 83 years ago, when I was 12. There was none of this internet nonsense, back then. Only the ocean, and fire for heat.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
@@hxhdfjifzirstc894 Wow. You really envy those brave yachties of yore, don't you? How sad.
@mitchellsmith4690
@mitchellsmith4690 9 ай бұрын
And we still haven't forgiven him...
@drewthompson7457
@drewthompson7457 8 ай бұрын
​@@hxhdfjifzirstc894: the St Roch?
@stevewindisch7400
@stevewindisch7400 5 ай бұрын
For many years I had a '91 MacGregor 26 (not the later motor sailor one). The centerboard was an extreme wing, but with it and the rudder up, she drew about a foot. All the pro's and con's you mentioned applied in spades. But, I could trailer it from Ohio down to the Keys or Miami to cross the Gulf Stream and cruise the near Bahamas, and did several times. Because of the water ballast, it sat on the trailer at about 6,000 lbs. with the 8 horse Johnson, and a six cylinder mini van could haul it. Yes it was "crank" , had lots of leeway, and flew around at anchor like it was trying to escape. But the outboard used only about 6 gallons of gas for an entire season on Lake Erie, it maneuvered great, and could point very high. You are completely correct, in that it is all about your requirements. And also right about WHEN to sail... the only times I ever got into trouble, was when I pushed it.
@CrisHogan-z7p
@CrisHogan-z7p Жыл бұрын
been following this guy for a couple years and explains matters very simplified...works for me. lol
@lightbox617
@lightbox617 Жыл бұрын
100 years ago, my brother and I had a 22 ft comet and a lighter lightning' Sailing and racing on lakes, a drop centerboard gave us maneuverability, good attack into the wind and SPEED. Pull it up when docking, drop it down when working
@RobA-Me
@RobA-Me Жыл бұрын
For the reasons you said, the full keel is very safe for ocean crossing... but i think they have a flaw for most coastal cruisers I never hear commented on. A full keel is difficult to turn forward and backwards thats understood. Most people dont cross oceans but coastal cruise and will cross many more bars than ocean storms. It is much easier to keep a modified keel boat straight when crossing a bar and being pushed from stern by a wave, than full keel that will broach more easily... and usually pushed into rocks. If most sailing is coastal and crossing a bar every few days, I think the crossover is preferable/safer. You can almost always find shelter when coastal from big storms. As always, it depends on your sailing.
@steveburke7675
@steveburke7675 Жыл бұрын
...for me...an encapsulated modified (long) fin with a skeg hung rudder.
@johannesborg813
@johannesborg813 Жыл бұрын
As a ships mechanic I've seen plenty of full keels with great maneuverability, usually with a slightly lengthened rudder or oversized prop. Those are probably the easiest riding boats I've been at the helm of.
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt Жыл бұрын
what do really big ships do? Lift up the keel in the harbor, and drop it when they are over the Titanic? I understood that this fancy technique was out of reach then, but the Maltese Falcon does it! I thought of a series of cross tube similar to a bow thruster. Then invest on intake flaps and exit flaps. Still, if a ship grabs deep into the water like a small vessel, shouldn't it be able to sail on the wind like it?
@jimskywaker4345
@jimskywaker4345 Жыл бұрын
@@ArneChristianRosenfeldt there are retractable keels on some modern sailing vessals
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt Жыл бұрын
@@jimskywaker4345 Yeah, I just was wondering if there is a relation ship with the number of masts on a ship. Multiple masts is like full keel in my book. You need to pass under a bridge? Retract your mast! Why is it so hard? I would want this feature to adjust for wind speed.
@robbyoliver4953
@robbyoliver4953 Жыл бұрын
I really like this channel. I know very little about sailboats. But here I learn something new every time. Telling me about keels letting me learn from an experience sailor is what I need. I think my choice would be a full keel or many a modified, I don’t want to need deep water everywhere I want to anchor. 5 ft isn’t bad but any more would be a pain I think. There is a area I want to be able to get into and that is Lake Sabine in Texas. I am not sure what kind of keel I would need for that. But it dose have some pretty shallow areas.
@adriansedillo3426
@adriansedillo3426 Ай бұрын
Full keel /cutaway forefoot, transom Stearns and transom hung rudder and gaffrig ketch.Had a cold molded 32' Hugh Angleman for 25 yrs.Loved it.
@fishernut4570
@fishernut4570 Жыл бұрын
Never have sailed but I plan to make sailing my last hobby. These vids are so helpful! Thanks.
@MikeM-go7hp
@MikeM-go7hp Жыл бұрын
Best of luck to you! I started this year. It was a whole lot less expensive than I expected it would be, and the sailing community has been really kind and helpful. I wish I'd have started years ago now I've gotten into it.
@sitatt
@sitatt 7 ай бұрын
Thank you, mate! I'd love to 'Patreon' you but I'm a modest, working, family guy who does sail a modest sailboat in the uk (very expensive for any kind of boat ownership). Just want to say thanks for the great content and for giving good advice to 'normal yachties'! fair winds,brother!
@pfeif1312
@pfeif1312 Жыл бұрын
Don’t forget the modified fin with centerboard like our Bristol 38.8. 4.5’ board up, 10.5 ‘ down
@dentonearnhardt9891
@dentonearnhardt9891 Жыл бұрын
Another well done video. I have had a swing keel, wing keel and now have a long chord fin keel at 7 feet of draft. It is a great compromise as it is stable, fast and has a very good motion in a sea way. She surfs well for a 43 year old boat (Nordic 44). The compromise is when we get to the east side of the states towards the end of our circumnavigation we will have to deal with some shoal areas. We are currently anchored in 9 feet of water in French Polynesia sitting out a blow. Many shoal draft boats that we know still don’t take advantage of their small draft.
@TheXxxcodexxx
@TheXxxcodexxx Жыл бұрын
I loved that he used the corvette for the sports car reference. Considering the corvette was named after a sailboat. Awsome job with that.
@dm5374
@dm5374 Жыл бұрын
5:28 Mariholmsbruk Folkboat!
@JohnStiletto
@JohnStiletto 2 ай бұрын
Have had all these and the one that is the shallowest is best but will give the most rocking. A catamaran is better. If you're not going to live on it the stiletto is a great boat. Once you weigh down a multi hull they lose a lot.
@sweisbrod6109
@sweisbrod6109 Жыл бұрын
Im a pro captain and a full-time cruiser on a Pearson 365 ketch for 22 years. It is refreshing to see a sailing channel dealing in good solid factual information. Good data clearly explained. Thank you captain.
@ianscott3180
@ianscott3180 Жыл бұрын
There is no answer to this question. Where do you sail? What kind of sailing do you do? Do you want to make long passages/ Most importantly, what is you budget. I sail a traditional long keel Contessa. A good, if slow and wet, sailing yacht. If I one the lottery tomorrow? A big Hallberg or Oyster in a minute. Fin keel, twin rudders and 200 mile days? Yes please! Nice to dream.🙃that was a big one.
@mathieut3197
@mathieut3197 Жыл бұрын
Bulbs and wing keels are nice in shallower water, but if you ground in a soft bottom you are SOL whence you can often "slice" through and wiggle free with a fin keel.
@jamesbaldwin7676
@jamesbaldwin7676 Жыл бұрын
Nothing better than a full-keeled boat with the rudder mounted on the stern and with a protected prop. There simply is no better configuration for a true blue-water vessel. The problem however is most boats never go very far off shore but spent most of their time in and around a crowded marina. Here is where the full-keel is no damn good. Their manuverability, particularily In reverse, is nothing short of a nightmare. I never back my boat up without a line tied to the stern (because you never know which way the stern my go.) Add a bowsprit in the mix and I have a floating shish kabob. I'm the guy that other boaters hate.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
You are overgeneralizing. How long is "long?" Cruisers favor keels where the bottom of the keel is about 1/2 of the waterline length with the rudder attached to the keel.
@jamesbaldwin7676
@jamesbaldwin7676 Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 Of course I'm generalizing since I'm not able to consider every boat hull out there, but to be specific, I have a DownEast 38. It's got a full keel with a cut-away forefoot, shoal draft with the rudder hung on the end of an 8000 lb encapsulated lead ballast. This may not be the very best blue-water hull configuration but it certainly one of them. And it's absolute hell to handle in the marina. It can also take a grounding (ask me how I know.) My statement was meant to be a general remark and one I think is shared by others.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesbaldwin7676 Almost 5 feet deep on your boat isn't so very shoal draft.
@jamesbaldwin7676
@jamesbaldwin7676 Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 The boat was designed to look like something built in the 19th Century and 5 ft draft would certainly have been considered "Shoal" back then. I believe it also makes this claim in the original sales brochure.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesbaldwin7676 England was famous for very deep draft boats in the early days of yachting, in contrast to beamy, shallow yachts found in America at that time. The point to draft offshore is self righting when knocked down.
@livingforsail
@livingforsail Жыл бұрын
I was looking for a boat with world travel potential and I love many of the full keel boats but I was attracted to the added performance and maneuverability benefits of the modified fin keel. Some of my favorite "blue water" boats like the Valiant 40 and passport 40 have that layout.
@snowgorilla9789
@snowgorilla9789 Жыл бұрын
Saw the title and thought " another youtube expert " to my very pleasant suprize you did an excellent job of explaining a very complicated topic
@andrewvisser5805
@andrewvisser5805 Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this balanced and informative article. It's also obvious that the author knows what he's talking about.
@Jeffrey-ed8sz
@Jeffrey-ed8sz 4 ай бұрын
I had an O'Day 23 PopTop, 4.5ft keel with 5' of centerboard that gave her draught of 9'6" a nice ride, and she pointed up really well.
@robertscholz4486
@robertscholz4486 Жыл бұрын
Great topic, but I wish that you had touched on swing keels and bilge keels. I would like to hear your opinion one each.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
If shoal draft is important, consider catamarans with daggerboards.
@Flakzor123
@Flakzor123 Жыл бұрын
Full keel also wants to round up quite a lot on a broad reach when the waves catch up to you. Trying to sail 135 degrees off true wind with an old aries windvane 10 years ago the boat would round up to 110 or so and then back down to 150+ making me slightly nervous since I had absolutely no intention of gybing at that time. A full keel is very comfortable close to beam reach in heavy seas as the base of the waves hit the keel first letting the hull "shoulder" into the wave which combined with some wind in the sails keeps the heelangle more or less constant way past the point where you can see the closest waves because of their height obscuring the next one. Edit: If I had to choose all over again I'd say this: for shorthanded cruising I want either the rig or keel to facilitate rebalancing the helm easily. Some old gaffrigged racingcutters facilitate this rebalancing with the centerboard they have in addition to their shallower full keel while some older rigtypes that are very unusual these days rebalance all on their own (luggers, search for "adventures of ocean pearl"). These days you can obviously use powered winches to reef and trim sails every time you change course but I would prefer to not have to rely on such devices without working myself sweaty each time.
@JD987abc
@JD987abc 4 ай бұрын
Excellent program. I’ve owned and sailed three different types of boats around the Chesapeake. A 17’ d/s, a 1980 27’ Cherubini designed fin keel Hunter and finally a 1975 35’ Pearson full keel with a center board. Obviously they all sailed differently and I enjoyed them for their unique features. The Pearson was fast to windward with the c/b down and had a lot of room both on deck and below. The Hunter was solid and comfortable and only drew 4’. I rigged each of them to meet my needs. Enjoyed the buying process, sailing them (as long as there was some wind). Each had good yanmar diesel engines while the d/s had a 4hp mercury on an ez in mount. The two largest were excellent for extended periods and equipped with complete galleys heads and births.
@LadyKSailing
@LadyKSailing 4 ай бұрын
thanks for watching!
@meatdog
@meatdog 3 ай бұрын
I love my fin keel on my Ericson!! My boat heels well and is very stable, smooth and is a dream. I draw 6 feet when fully loaded with my liveaboard load.
@jamesstuart3346
@jamesstuart3346 Жыл бұрын
Best keel is a full keel with a cutout ahead of the prop. You get directional stability with reasonable performance under power, especially when backing up
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
My moderate keel boat had a bronze foot that extended far enough aft to make a semi-balanced keel possible. The keel bottom was a bit less than half the waterline length and the rudder hung from it.
@david-svtexas
@david-svtexas Жыл бұрын
Nice video. You might have omitted A couple of comments for novices who might be considering blue water sailing . 1) The weather is wrong....a lot. I Left Galveston, Tx for the Bahamas on a late may norther that was forecast to last 12-24 hours. Four days later in the middle of Gulf of Mexico the north wind was still blowing 25-30+kts sustained gusting 40+. Two days later the forecast was variable to 10 kts, we woke to 25 kts sustained now out of the east 🤦‍♂. 2) Prop placement relative to keel. Crab pots, long line fishermen and just junk in the water. I have had fishermen drop their lines right across my course off shore. You can dodge crab pots during the day but at night no way. An exposed prop can create a risk. 3) Bow thruster for the win on full keel port maneuvering 😎. 4) Regarding speed on a full keel: Code Zero or Asymmetrical For speed on a full keel. You can fly them much more often on a full keel and they are easy to use. You can also fly more sail longer. I am still full main and genoa(110%) at 20+. 5) Maybe not about the keel, buy a self tacking staysail is a God send in heavy weather.
@dutchflats
@dutchflats Жыл бұрын
How about the best Wednesday night racing boats? I've sailed on both fins and full keel boats, you're so right about compromises. The full keel loves sailing in strong winds and big waves but can't move in light stuff while the fins go like a rabbit close to the wind and can still get along in slight puffs. Decide what you like to do most often, and pick accordingly.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
Your stereotype is misleading.
@davidhalliday7776
@davidhalliday7776 Жыл бұрын
You are missing one of my favorite. Bilge (twin) keels. Like it because they are low draft but they are also great for drying out with. They do have much more drag an less maneuverable than a fin. I have also considered a centerboard boat as it two fits the shallow draft (when up) and good to dry the boat out. That said I have never done the centerboard thing.
@ezraprice6709
@ezraprice6709 Жыл бұрын
Got a small bilge Keeler myself, shallow draft and the ability to dry out is awesome. In fact my mooring dries out daily, not many other designs that could manage that.
@keithrjoseph9528
@keithrjoseph9528 Жыл бұрын
Dried out moorings is the natural habitat for my Ovini with it's swing keel
@andreahuntjens3763
@andreahuntjens3763 Жыл бұрын
Great video & thanks for the IP shout out! We cruise the Chesapeake Bay & the 4' draft works well in the creeks & channels.
@Eline_Meijer
@Eline_Meijer 3 ай бұрын
The real answer is "it depends"
@harryschaefer8563
@harryschaefer8563 Жыл бұрын
I used to love the annual cleaning and re-painting of the bottom of the Triton an (Alberg designed boat) I used to crew on, on the Chesapeake Bay. I just loved being in the boatyard and seeing the variety of hulls. What's below the waterline of a sailboat is just as beautiful as what's up top. I had a sunfish as a kid, spent summers at Greenwood Lake NY which had a very active Star fleet that raced most weekends. The Star is a beautiful design with a bulb keel and most of the Star owners kept their boats dangling in the air during the week to keep the bottoms from getting fouled.
@RajeshSingh-Bhangu
@RajeshSingh-Bhangu Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@pneumarian
@pneumarian Жыл бұрын
I see a negative review, I say to myself, "Ooh! They'll probably actually describe the product experience!" You did a very respectable job of just that.
@davidcutter1030
@davidcutter1030 Жыл бұрын
As an owner of both a fin keel and a full length keel boats, a following sea means a great deal more tiller control as the fin keel boat swivels with the wind as each wave passes underneath. The fin keel has on many occasions sailed at 8 knots, while we are much more comfortable at 5 knots on our full keel boat. Following seas are not problem for the full keel boat.
@lyfandeth
@lyfandeth Жыл бұрын
A fin keel with a NACA foil profile will give it the maximum lift and minimum drag. She'll point higher into the wind, too. If you want leverage, you cut some 2-4" holes fore and aft in it, low down, and replace the lead with tungsten. Twice the density. Think just one step out of the box. Full keels can be great. Very stable tracking. And still trying to run a straight line while you want to turn on a dime. Horses for courses.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
And absolutely nobody uses tungsten. $$$$$$$$$$$ Maximum lift = minimum longitudinal stability. Tungston's hard to work with, and the difference in density isn't twice, but @58% more. Tungston 6,000 # = $90,000. Lead 6,000 # = $2,800.
@mikenb3461
@mikenb3461 Жыл бұрын
Crap. "Bathtub full of Volkswagens." I just shot tea out my nose thanks to that! On topic, I had a small boat with a swing keep but never felt comfortable with it. I now have a slightly larger Tanzer 26 with a full keel and I've hit the sweet spot for the area I sail in - the lower St. John River valley in New Brunswick, Canada.
@randywise5241
@randywise5241 Жыл бұрын
I remember being on a small fishing boat that had a retractable keel. The seas were rough and the small harbor was shallow. It worked but had constant repair issues.
@DrJohn493
@DrJohn493 Жыл бұрын
Good review of the options and compromises with various keel designs. I always thought our Morgan 32 shallow draft keel (5') with a skeg hung rudder was the perfect vessel for coastal cruising out of Panama City FL. The keel stepped mast was added peace of mind. The Morgan was great for getting in and out of shallow anchorages. And dream trips to the Keys and Bahamas. But gotta admit a friend's Endeavor 42 that I had a chance to sail on in the Bahamas was a very comfortable experience in varied conditions. A riding sail helped at anchor in windy conditions.
@GERntleMAN
@GERntleMAN Жыл бұрын
I can't say I have a lot of experience in sailing. But our 1965 Van de Stadt Andromeda 50 with it's modified hull sails beautifully. 7Bf and only the 25m² Fok (jib) and we averaged 9kts while not noticing the 1,5m waves. So comfortable and even in the numerous small harbours in Greece it was so maneuverable that we only needed our ship length to turn. Great sailing on something like that
@oveohlen3550
@oveohlen3550 Жыл бұрын
The main take-away should always be to get a keel type that suits your location, and the conditions you are likely to experience. A long keel sails fantastic in the Baltic sea, with its rough, irregular wave pattern, however you shouldn't take it to the Southern Ocean (see reports regarding the Golden Globe Race and the weakness of long keel boats in those conditions.) A short keel will allow you some superb racing and fast cruising, however the course stability of a long keel can be a real benefit if sailing single handed, etc. Also noteworthy: if you are sailing in tidal waters, a twin keel can be awesome. ;)
@langstonholland9272
@langstonholland9272 11 ай бұрын
You mentioned 2 or 3 times the boat length for an Island Packet turn. This is true only if you leave it in forward as you turn. I recently attended a docking class with the Maryland School of Sailing and they use IP's. We learned to do standing turns in little more than the length of the boat with the aid of its prop walk. Love your videos! : )
@ashleymalamute
@ashleymalamute Ай бұрын
I think the true hybrid keel is the Passport 40 or Valiant 40 style keel, which in essence are long run keels with a cutout at the back and the forefoot removed. These are fully integral keels, ie part of the boat, they are still very long giving almost railroad directional stability, and you can still hit reefs with them. The more modern modified fins are really just squat fin keelers, and you're generally in for some major floor work if you take on a reef at 6 knots.
@beartankoperator7950
@beartankoperator7950 Жыл бұрын
the final advise about "if you are worried about it get the island packet" is sound advise just like when you suggest to the person who is afraid of getting in an accident "ok just get the big suv and you will be safer"
@Matlacha_Painter
@Matlacha_Painter Жыл бұрын
My Bayfield 36 (waterline) cutter had a full keel with a cut back entry. You had to anchor with a sail at the stern to keep her from putting her stern to the wind and bow on the chain.
@theaprum1
@theaprum1 Ай бұрын
It's nice and informative.
@LadyKSailing
@LadyKSailing Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@Pauljustin75
@Pauljustin75 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, very informative.
@inneshutton3716
@inneshutton3716 Жыл бұрын
Good information, a drop keel would have been a good addition to review.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
They're expensive and may not function when desired to raise or lower. If they raise a long way, being up may make the boat unstable when a gust hits.
@Garfield.Farkle
@Garfield.Farkle 3 ай бұрын
There is another consideration in keel type. Here in the Chesapeake Bay are numerous crab fishermen with crab pots everywhere, especially around marinas. One guy I sailed with has an Endeavor 32 and seems to collect the lines of every crab pot in the Bay in his prop. A full-keeled boat prevents that from happening. I have seen boats that had a piece of metal attached to the keel and rudder to prevent this.
@LadyKSailing
@LadyKSailing 3 ай бұрын
lol you might want to check out the last 6 minutes or so of this video- I had my own adventure with crab pots on Chesapeake Bay 🤣 kzbin.info/www/bejne/hJmcm4uinpmoe9Esi=9iVmyhptc8cxp3o2
@Garfield.Farkle
@Garfield.Farkle 3 ай бұрын
@@LadyKSailing Ok, I'll look at it now. The Bay is the only place I've sailed and it's a lot of fun. I really enjoy night sailing and it is special to be in an area where there are very few lights ashore and one can drift back in time, knowing the sights, sounds and currents you're experiencing were the same when Captain John Smith sailed these waters in 1608. Back then, there were reefs of oysters that were nav hazards. Oysters back then could be the size of a dinner plate. They are spectacular roasted over a fire. EDIT: I'm trying not to laugh - you were like a minesweeper, picking up 2 crab post on your anchor and one on your prop! You left out the answer to the Big Question: Did you score any Chesapeake Bay blue crabs? They are delicious!
@LadyKSailing
@LadyKSailing 3 ай бұрын
😂
@peterasmussen2933
@peterasmussen2933 Жыл бұрын
I have an atkins thistle and find her great, comfortable and secure. Any sailboat will get to hull speed in 15 knots of wind. In lighter conditions a fin keel may be slightly faster but the difference is not worth shouting about. Storm in a teacup! The big difference lies in manuevering in harbour, mine is a dog in this situation but a gem at sea. Mine has much less leeway than most fin keeled yachts.
@NorthSideNorm
@NorthSideNorm Жыл бұрын
My 21 ft buccaneer has a full keel, It's can be a pain sometimes sailing on the Saint John river but it's so stable it more than makes up for it. Tacking in light wind must be done carefully to make sure you get around without stalling.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
Back the foresail when coming about until you have paid off convincingly, and then bring the foresail in for the next tack quickly.
@NorthSideNorm
@NorthSideNorm Жыл бұрын
@@timdunn2257 Thank you so much for the tip. We just recently started sailing ( I grew up in Muskoka windsurfing and dingy sailing occasionally) so my wife and I are beginners and any tips or tricks are greatly appreciated.
@DavidOHara-m8i
@DavidOHara-m8i 7 ай бұрын
I have strong feelings on which keel is best for cruisers. I'd go for a modified encapsulated fin keel with shoal draft. I intend to go into shallow water where I can get good protection and I will probably run aground. The encapsulated keel of my 28' S2 (3'10" draft) was great as I never worried about keel failure. Integrated over time, a shoal draft keel is much safer than a deep draft keel as it allows you to get to safe harbors that a deep draft keel cannot go. I dont worry about ability to point into the wind as I normally want to only do downwind cruising. Long distance cruising to windward sucks. If I have to go to windward, I use the engine with a sail to prevent rolling. A very interesting option might be bilge keels as they are meant for shallow water. If I built another boat she'd have bilge keels.
@MikeJones-wn5tb
@MikeJones-wn5tb Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video. I had an Allied Seawind 30 ( I think only one of 2 Allied in the UK, the other is a 32). The long keel was fantastically stable and allowed, when balanced for the helm to be left for quite long periods. And in a blow was well able to tale the heel and waves. But not a marina boat. The thought of coming of the fingers at Fleetwood kept me awake at night.... However, when I switched to a swinging mooring at Holyhead I became sold on the long keel. I now have a small fin (Jaguar 21).Zero directional stability unless the helm is firmly gripped. But, as you say , horses for courses. I didn't stay the full course to see if you looked at Bilge keels. Soo useful for the drying harbours. But again a compromise.
@walterdavis4808
@walterdavis4808 Жыл бұрын
That was a great explanation . I havr a jet 14. And its got a deep narrow fin keel and want to roll over with every wind change but supper fast . My American Marine has a full displacement hull and full keel yes , heavy and a fright train ! But doesn't seem to notice bad weather .
@alainremi267
@alainremi267 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for your analysis !!! I'm an old offshore sailor who had five sailboats & I sailed from England to the Caribbean, the USA Atlantic east coast, Panama, French Polynesia, Hawaii Vancouver etc... I even sailed single handed offshore in my last & preferred sailboat an Ericson 34' third hand very well kept 😄I think my choice for offshore cruising would be a centerboard boat, not only to have access to shallow bay but also the safety offshore in a gale when I would raise the centerboard(s) to slide down the waves without the risk of stumbling on a fixed keel
@wahid-lg1kk
@wahid-lg1kk 5 ай бұрын
I'll take a 3/4 full keel with a big solid section forward...
@jancosax
@jancosax 7 ай бұрын
I was on the longkeel in the video , the yacht Puff for a inspection. The Island Packet was really nice & comfy with even a washing machine aboard. But also bit too expensive. Nice too see the picture in your vid.
@austingode
@austingode 3 ай бұрын
The worst keel is the one that comes off ……….
@stephangamingyt
@stephangamingyt Жыл бұрын
My family owns a yacht (Midget 31) is a full keel and even continues into the rudder. I can agree that making manoeuvres is not easy but we always have tricks for that. We use during sailing the sails and when in a harbour (close to a little wall under the water) we put a line 3 places further and move that way. For the wind its beginning to move ok at 7 knots but is very nice at 10 knots.
@CB-68-westcreations
@CB-68-westcreations 26 күн бұрын
Yep, Yep, I did click on it. And what I learned from your video, which I really appreciate, is that for my purposes a full keel on an older boat suits what I want more than the others. I want a boat that is going to get me where I'm going in one piece. I want a boat. I can take out in Bluewater and Sail from the tip of Florida all the way around to Alaska. And if it takes me a couple extra days to get there, at least I will get there.
@ElAnciano92071
@ElAnciano92071 Жыл бұрын
Curiously perhaps, the 1st non-centerboard boat I learned on in the Navy was a Columbia 25 back in 1968. It was a full keel. The first one I actually bought back in 1974 however was a Newport 27 with a fin keel. (I started on a Columbia 15 centerboard boat B4 I qualified on the 25.)
@FishingWithSails
@FishingWithSails Жыл бұрын
The Hake Seaward 46RK. The only sailboat in the world with a retracting 7,500lb fin bulb keel. Only 9 of them made. The keel retracts all the way up inside the bottom of the hull to have a minimum draft of 2.5' and with the keel all the way down, a maximum draft of 7'. My boss and I took one sailing for a sea trial and I was blown away with its performance. It was extremely fast in every direction, and very nice to have all electric winches. It wasn't as comfortable as my Morgan 41, but it did sail extremely well. Overall, the boat was fantastic and very beautiful. Unfortunately the cost of one is very high, usually upwards of $450k.
@henryroscoe2464
@henryroscoe2464 Жыл бұрын
Here in the UK, I tried a number of different keel formats, one of the best for fast cruising and reasonably shallow draft, for me, turned out to be a wing keel. It had lots of lift, remained stable and felt safe at anchor if caught in a late night squall with only a skeleton watch on deck!
@alexlysenko3276
@alexlysenko3276 Жыл бұрын
What would be your strategy if grounded on a falling tide...stand upright or try to get her to lay over?
@bobcornwell403
@bobcornwell403 Жыл бұрын
I think we have really messed up the momenclature a bit. When I first started studying sailboat design in the early '70s, a keel was described by its length relative to the waterline of the boat. For instance, if the top of the keel (the part that was counted) extended the length of the waterline (typically 3/4 the length of the boat back then), it was called a 'full keel'. If it extended to only half the waterline, it was called a 'half keel'. The IOR Era boats typically had 'quarter keels'. More contemporary boats may have what back then would have been called 'eighth keels'. The nice thing about this naming system is that you know exactly what is being described. Shorter keels obviously need to be deeper than longer ones. So if you know the general length of your keel, you have a pretty good clue as to its likely relative depth. The old difference between a 'fin keel' and its more conventional counterpart is that the 'fin keel' is an appendage added to the hull, so there is a noticeable line between where the bottom of the hull ends and the top of the keel begins. With a more conventional keel (almost always a 'full keel'), the hull is blended into the keel with a gentle radius. It is entirely possible to have a 'full keel', which is also a 'fin keel'.
@mikebrooks6769
@mikebrooks6769 Жыл бұрын
I bought a project boat 19 feet on my way up from a dinghy with a lifting center board, so a lifting keel was not totally unfamiliar. The advantage were great. I could still get into small bays and anchorages, I could still beach the boat ⛵ in lighter winds I could lower only partially the keel. I don't think it would work on big boats but anything up to around 22 feet , its worth mention and consideration.
@xpatsteve
@xpatsteve Жыл бұрын
Nice, clear comparison of all the advantages and disadvantages, thanks. I'd be interested to hear your opinion on bilge keels, especially for ocean crossings.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
Bilge keels are rare. They are favored for the kind of English harbor where the boat is kept on a mooring and dries out at low tide.
@randomoldbloke
@randomoldbloke Жыл бұрын
I have done a few passages with bilge keel just short hops of between 250 and 500 NM of open ocean and it was as good as a single keel , points 25deg to the wind sailed happily with a rail under just well mannered. Been hit with 40 knt wind no drama . That was a 28ft boat
@miloswanson9646
@miloswanson9646 Жыл бұрын
Back in the early '70s, my old man had a Islander Bahama 24 with a full keel. His buddy had a Pearson 26 with a fin. Yes, the Pearson was marginally faster (around a1/2 to 3/4-knot advantage to the Pearson), and could point higher into the wind. BUT on Lake Erie where the waves kick up in a hurry, the Pearson would pound on 3-4-foot waves whereas the Islander cut through the waves because of the shape of the hull at the front. Later, the Old Man bought a fin keel Catalina 30 with a fin keel ... It rode like a bucking bronco! The round bottom front hull would ride up on the short-period Lake Erie waves, where the full-keel would slice through. Fast forward a few years, and the Old Man retired and was looking for his ocean-going boat to sail the world, and he found a Challenger 38 ketch with a full keel. He added a 4' bowsprit to allow for twin jibs, and along with the addition of a main topsail which technically turned it into a cutter-rigged Ketch. VERY stable for long-distance sailing on the open ocean. With the (relatively) short masts allowing for more sail area down low.compared to a sloop rig, it did not heel nearly as much. The sails could be set for days at a time! in 1984, he was (single-handing) sailing from the Bahamas to Bermuda in the same major storm that sunk a couple of Tall Ships. No he didn't have all of those sails up in the storm, but the Challenger made it through with no damage, although HE did have to stay awake for 60 hours straight! After provisioning in Bermuda, he then sailed on across the Atlantic... but that's another story... Islander, Catalina and Challenger boats were all built within a few miles of each other in the Los Angeles area...
@burtvincent1278
@burtvincent1278 Жыл бұрын
I have a lead swing keel, best of both worlds.
@Originalcincity
@Originalcincity Жыл бұрын
Very helpful - Thx
@williamavery9185
@williamavery9185 Жыл бұрын
This all depends on what you are using the boat for. If racing a fin or bulb. For cruising a full keel, gives more stability and the prop is more protected. But if your on a mooring that drise out a bilge keel is a must. Just my 2 cents.
@d.p.2680
@d.p.2680 11 ай бұрын
There's also the other option, best of both worlds, just go with more than one hull, speed, shallow draft, steady performance, if you have a tendency to motion sickness, go for a catamaran, if you have adhd, go for the trimaran, and yes, also like the bilge keel on both mono hull and multihull, there's a lot of safety in speed and shallow draft, outrun a storm, or creep up on a beach behind an island.
@desertisland3747
@desertisland3747 Жыл бұрын
Long keel for cruising/liveaboard, dinghy for fun, bilge keeler, good weekend compromise, why ever have anything that could snap off under a boat?
@Stetsonhatman
@Stetsonhatman Жыл бұрын
Coworker was sailing a boat of unknown size from SF to San Diego, a route they had sailed numerous times. Rogue wave rolled them and they capsized, they didn't see it coming. Wife was lost, but he was rescued after a few days. I assume a robust keel would help against waves coming abeam - to a certain point.
@JohnCornellier
@JohnCornellier 7 ай бұрын
I have a Ted Hood designed Paceship Westwind. It's one of his designs with the "delta form hull" (aka whale belly). It's a deep V hull with a rounded bottom. Lots of internal ballast down low, and a swing centreboard.
@Zilahi-Branyi_Laszlo
@Zilahi-Branyi_Laszlo 2 ай бұрын
It's so funny to me that you give us car analogy to summarize what a type of keel for. For me it's an analogy to understand what a type of car for.
@sa25-svredemption98
@sa25-svredemption98 Жыл бұрын
With regards to fin keels too, another key point is their design makes them intrinsically weaker than full length keels. For many sailors, this will not really be a factor. However, for blue water sailors, this is critically important, as loosing a keel is unrecoverable - even worse than dismasting, and way more deadly! Even the best open ocean racers can loose keels, and it's not due to inferior design or build per se. The very nature of them means they will break when certain forces are applied - like extremely rough seas with intense pitching and yawing, or hitting something like a container, reef or marine creature (or being attacked, such as is becoming an issue for smaller cruising yachts around the Iberian Peninsula with the increasing Orca attacks). These things will still impact full length keel boats, but hull damage has more likelihood of being contained, and definitely has higher survival chances, than completely loosing your keel. And this has to be a consideration for anyone who is sailing outside of VHF range! Super Maxi's are able to contend with that because they are closely monitored by race officials and shore support teams. However, most private yachties don't have that sort of support, and this needs to be recognised. The actual design is a key safety factor. In fact, we do consider other aspects of design on this basis regularly - multihulls are not used in heavy weather sailing for precisely this reason. Although in light and moderate conditions they are better than monohulls, everyone is aware there is a lot of stress in the cross members in heavy conditions, and if they break, or if capsize does occur, there is no coming back. As a result, monohulls are almost exclusively used where heavy weather is a real factor. Well, the same thing with fin keels. If safety in heavy weather or remote seas is a concern, full keels are pretty much the only option. Their limits - both structurally and in hull performance - definitely exist, but they have much higher safety performance than any other option (unless you are considering motorised vessels, where semi submerged, self-righting and submarine options exist, but that is a whole other discussion!)
@Nozzall
@Nozzall Жыл бұрын
I would disagree with your statement that a full keel boat needs 2-3 times its length to turn around. You can spin it on it's axis but it take a lot of effort and is definitely harder. But it is doable with enough practice.
@timdunn2257
@timdunn2257 Жыл бұрын
Yes, you have to back the foresail, and cast it off at just the right moment to keep it from paying off too far - by bringing the foresail in for the new tack promptly.
@rex8255
@rex8255 Жыл бұрын
Your comment on compromise reminds me of the description of an aircraft I heard once: "A series of compromises flying in close formation". Boats? "A hole in the water you throw money into".
@Sailin_Knot_Workin
@Sailin_Knot_Workin Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info, Tim! Full keel Cabo Rico 34 FTW!!
@johnconnor6725
@johnconnor6725 Жыл бұрын
My "In my Head", Sailboat Has retractable keel and airplane wing type setup. Like collase drinking cups. And wind turbine on top main mast, I think a turbine could be used as a sail while making power and directly driving a prop. $0.02
@wythewinchester3236
@wythewinchester3236 Жыл бұрын
When I was a teenager my uncle bought a 28' gulfweed ketch. One week end we went to Santa Catalina Island. About 2/3 the way there, the wind picked up as and started pushing some 12' to 15 ' swells which I thought was great. My uncle not so much. As soon as we came into the lee of the island the went down and we arrived at Forth of July Cove no worse for our small adventure.
@sailingcelticstar7872
@sailingcelticstar7872 Жыл бұрын
Best keel for cruising in my opinion is the full keel. Just don't try to reverse and steer.... LoL. I have the worst keel. A Modified Fin. A combination of a full keel and a fin keel with a 4'9" draft
@Mike9001000
@Mike9001000 8 ай бұрын
I had a 1970s bilge keel yacht which was great for drying out in small Cornish harbours. But it was useless to windward.
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