How deep

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T

Tip Thienes

I just bought a house with a 40 foot dock. Most in the neighborhood use shallow draft fishing boats so the channel to the Intracostal is not much. My question is just how much water do you need to safely motor a Hunter 24 or 27 water ballast sailboat. Will two feet hack it? How about the rudder kicking up? Thanks for any comments on this. I like the Hunter water ballast much more that the Mac 26 and sure hope I will not have to go to the Mac 26. A sailboat with a 50 HP outboard is pathetic, lol. Thanks for your comments. Tip
 
Jun 15, 2004
78
- - Edmond, OK
Cutting it awfully close

With the centerboard up, the ballast empty, and the rudder floating horizontal, you can manage 2 ft. However, the boat will handle like an empty oil drum. Definitely no sail up under these conditions. The challenge will be if you get to the Intracoastal and flood the ballast, you need some way of pumping it out to get to your dock. Otherwise, you will need to come and go with the high tide. Good luck
 
Jun 3, 2004
12
Hunter 26 Yankeetown, FL
Specs

The board up draft is 1'-9". I believe this figure assumes a full ballast tank. See link below. Steering is very tough with the rudder horizontal.
 
Aug 11, 2006
1,446
Hunter H260 Traverse City
How far to deep (5ft+)water? To motor (or sail) at hull speed you need the rudder down, so that will be your biggest limitation. You should be able to motor anywhere your neighbors go with the board and rudder up; however, as already noted, handling under these conditions sucks. It is possible this is one situation where the M26 handles better than the H240.
 
W

wayne

H 240 depth

My 1.5 cents worth (motoring only). 1. for a H240 I would not recommend for a second moving off the doc without filling the water ballast. You will only gain a few inches for the sake of loosing a lost of stability and safety. 2. I have had to leave areas/docks around 2ft depth, with the rudder up and i have the steering linked to the outboard the turns are slow and straightening/response is even slower (but i manage easily with planning and knowing the steering is minimal). If the motor is independent you would do a lot better steering. 3. I have a nice setup where the rudder kicks up in the shallows inadvertently, however with it kicked up (trailing in the horizontal) it is difficult to turn and puts way to much strain on everything and not recommended as an option unless you want to go straight :). The depth of your outboard is approx depth of you centerboard up for mine anyway.
 
Jun 2, 2004
3,612
Hunter 23.5 Fort Walton Yacht Club, Florida
Talk to One of the Shrimpers

Put a case of beer at the end of your dock once a week and tell them they can have it if they come and get it. After a while the channel will be deep and wide.
 
Feb 15, 2004
735
Hunter 37.5 Balt/Annapolis/New Bern
the Shrimpers...

had to laugh at that one. That's the kind of practical advice we need more of on this board!
 
May 7, 2004
23
Hunter 260 Lake Wawasee
H260 will do it

I had a 240 first and now a 260. We regularly go back into a channel with shallow water to reach our favorite restaurant. We have steering linkage between rudder and outbord which helps, also you can use the rudder angled down about 35 degrees or so. I keep it there with the downhaul line cleated in place. You will want to motor only but with a full ballast tank. Never had a problem.
 
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