The deep keel H33C and shoal keel H33C are two ENTIRELY different animals. The Superb reputation is based on the deep keel. The shoal draft, which is what Rich and I own tend to round up early and often. Using the traveler is a help and necessity, but the occasional heavy gust will get you if you're already on the edge. Possibly dependant on year of production the rudder of the shoal 33 is about 2 inches higher than the shoal keel, and considerably shorter than the deep rudder. I HAVE measured this. I learned from an old Hunter guy this weekend at Annapolis that if you were racing a shoal draft back in those days and complained they would replace the rudder with a deep rudder. Mostly on San Francisco Bay, but who knows what happened elsewhere?
The object of moving the head stay forward was to move the center of effort forward a bit to "improve manners" as I put it, that is , make the boat steer a bit more neutral and less sensitive to rounding up. There are plenty of manufacturers who have moved the head stay forward on a sprit when, after production started, found they had too much helm. Com-Pac comes immediately to mind
My head stay is now 18" forward of the original tack piont. Is it a major difference? Not so much. Did it improve manners a wee bit? I believe so. I already had the anchor platform so adding some fittings made up by Gauhauer (think Island Packet) and some wire and fittings from Rigging only, and some fiberglass work inside the bow wasn't a real big deal. Pictures of my bow platform have been posted several times so I'd guess they can be located. If need be I can post again.
I've had the boat out on the ocean in 30 knots with sizable seas with a brimm full water tank (52 pluss gallons) with two seasick people laying on that and I can assure you the bow does NOT bury.
I found the picture. Cherubini Forum, "excessive rounding up ....." , 12-07-2010, reply numbetr 17.