Old Salt
"Having your whole boat be the LWL means that you don't have any reserve boyancy on the "ends" which is a good thing for a real cruising boat that you load down with supply's."Your wrong here. Say we have boat A that is 20,000 lbs and has a LWL of 32' and boat B that weights the same but a LWL of 28'. Boat A can hold more weight without raising the water line. Boat A will have a higher hull speed. Boat A will have more storage space. Boat B will have a nicer ride. BTW: I added approx 1,500 lbs to my boat when I moved on board and the water line didn't budge (I was actually curious about that so I marked it).Some say a faster boat is safer then a heavy boat. You may not out run a storm, but you may make your destination much faster and reduce the chances of being in that storm, which is why I want a fast boat. The problem is, if it's a light boat, it will be a rougher ride and now that I've decide (decided after I bought my boat) that I'm going around the world, that I need to decide if I can handle it in this boat. I know the boat can handle it. I just don't know if I can handle it. I may need a smoother riding boat. I have 4 years to find that one out. One thing is for sure, if I do trade in, I'll be trading in for something with large tanks, lots of sail area, and very strong supports for the mast. It will also have a protected rudder and a modified full keel. It will also have an open transome because I want the water to leave the cockpit as fast as it comes in.So you pick your boat and I'll pick mine but don't go spitting out false facts and mis-quoting me.