my thanks also
My thanks also. I asked the original question because I thought capsize screen had to do with the righting moment at 90 degrees, not 180 degrees. My apologies for an inadequately phrased question.I sold my O'Day 22 because the sailing I was either doing or wanted to do was beyond her. She was great for Lake Carlyle, but my future sailing plans include much bigger waters (KY lake, gulf, mississippi river), and I want a more able boat, though not necessarily much bigger. What I was really looking for here were the comments many of you made ... that these boats are able, that they'll come up from a knockdown, etc. Again, thank you. I was looking at an H25.5. In a 25 foot boat, I'll work REAL hard to stay out of 9-ft breaking waves!!!!That leads me to one comment I want to make. Somewhere in this thread was the suggestion that 9 ft breaking waves take time to build, thus allowing time to get to port. I've seen them build that big on Lake Michigan in an hour or so. That's not enough time to get in. In addition, you can get waves like that very quickly around an inlet.So my conclusion is that, while capsize screen is NOT the most critical thing to look at in a small coastal crusier, it's still something to keep under consideration.Thanks again,Tom MonroeCarlyle Lake