with all of the different types of keels available, I'm curious to know which is the most popular amongst all the sailors out there....
There is no "most popular." It's like asking: "What is the BEST?".......anything. Doesn't work. All sailboats are compromises, whether it be tiller vs. wheel, inboard vs. outboard, placement of traveler, type of rudder or type of keel.I'm curious to know which is the most popular amongst all the sailors out there....
This.Well for performance, skinny and deep with the weight concentrated at the bottom like in a bulb. The obscure French boats (Finot designs) look like they are going for a swing keel so you get high performance and shallow draft.
Until you run aground, as in the O'Day 322; then not so good!For Florida, it's hard to beat the shoal draft wing keel.
I have recently purchased my first water ballast boat. It is a bit more tender at first and that takes getting used to... but here the main advantage is not the ability to change my ballast but rather the ability to dump it entirely for when I trailer the boat. I have a swing dagger board for pointing. The advantage there is shoal and again for trailering. I would not try crossing an ocean on this boat but for coastal cruising, there are some clear advantages.... Water ballast is an interesting option allowing the boat to be lighter or heavier as required.
"Popularity" of keel-type is perhaps not a good question as it may be "forced" by one's cruising area--near or far. IF, however, I lived in a perfect world where I could pick my spots while holding down a land side job, I would cruise mostly the deep waters typical of the west coast of North and Central America, the Caribbean, and areas of New England, where I would prefer deep, fixed, fin-keeled yachts with the keel strong enough to withstand a moderate hit or two w/o breaking something loose, etc.You need to ask which keels are most popular amongst sailors who sail where you plan to sail. The average depth of the Chesapeake Bay is 2 feet, so if I had a 7 foot keel I would be observing much of the Bay with binoculars. Same with the 10,000 islands and Florida Key backcountry, or the Exumas.
A large part of the popularity of modem lifting keels is that is gives all those 'deep keel' benefits, with the ability to take the boat into shallow/tidal areas. The keel on the Pogo gives almost 12 feet of draft for enormous stability, but comes up at the press of a button to 3 feet. In addition, the mechanism has a hydraulic fuse that opens and protects the boat in the event of a very hard grounding; one that would almost certainly cause structural damage to a fixed keel."Popularity" of keel-type is perhaps not a good question as it may be "forced" by one's cruising area--near or far. IF, however, I lived in a perfect world where I could pick my spots while holding down a land side job, I would cruise mostly the deep waters typical of the west coast of North and Central America, the Caribbean, and areas of New England, where I would prefer deep, fixed, fin-keeled yachts with the keel strong enough to withstand a moderate hit or two w/o breaking something loose, etc.