Delta Ditch Run at Stockton Sailing Club/Richmond Yacht ClubJune 12
Story
Congratulations to Get Happy!!
Recap by Brendan Busch


Aerial Photos by H20 Shots
Result
PosBoatTotalRace 1
1Get Happy!!11
2Magic Bus22
3Shenanigans33
4Light'n Up44
5Discotheque55
6Dianne66
7Take Five77
8Opa!88
9Peaches99
10Desperado1010
11Libra11DNF
11El Raton11DNF
11Archimedes11DNF
11Expressway11DNF
11Scandalous11DNF
11Elise11DNS
export csv

Regatta Message Board

Replying to this message
Reply | Post New Message | All Messages | this message is spam
Author: Joe B.
Subject: Main Hatch sealing
Info: (13201 views) Posted: Monday 12-22-14 02:33:09 AM
For the coastal waters, I can imagine some scenarios where water would intrude into the main companionway in a capsize, wave breaking over the transom, or even complete rollover. Thus, the requirements for a secured hatch. I am also reminded, that a secured hatch keeps things from leaving the cabin.

For the SF bay, I can imagine a boat on its ear, chute in the water near a rounding, someone hits you and spins the cockpit into the chop or the collision helps roll the vessel past 90 degrees.

For SHTP, I also used a rubber/poly shock cord that allowed me to keep the hatch tensioned down while secured to the sliding hatch.

I prefer thick polycarbonate so I can also see what's going on while I am downstairs. For the ocean, I also take a second wooden hatch with me that doubles as a portable nav/chart table.

Some like a 2 piece hatch that comes up to the height of the seats. If you take a breaking wave on the transom, this will help reduce the amount water that gets flushed in the cabin. I will take some pics and post.

:: It was before my time, but I heard the Racoon Straights
:: sinking was due to water going in the open front
:: hatch...
::
:: Maybe someone is knows for sure can chime in...

Reply | Post New Message | All Messages | this message is spam

Your Name
Your E-Mail (optional)
Subject
Password (optional - allows you to delete later)