I am considering buying a Catalina 310 or posibly Beneteau 311.
I have never owned a sailboat, but have chartered many 30-33' boats in the last 20 years.
My question is how strong is the modern keel (1995-2009) compared to boats made in the 70's and 80's. The reason I ask is, 25 years ago a friend bought a 1978 columbia 28' or 30' and I remember sailing with him on lake champlaine and we were motoring at between 5-6 knots and hit a rock about as big as a volkswagon and stopped on a dime.
He sailed the boat the rest of the season and when he hauled out the boat the only obvious damage was a dent in the keel. I remember looking at the keel, keel bolts and the hull for damage and all I remember is the dent in the keel.
My buddy sailed this boat for many years after (not sure if he ever hit hard like that again) and I was always amased at how the boat took the hit.
How would a modern day Hunter, Catalina, Beneteau handle such a incident?
Sigbear
I have never owned a sailboat, but have chartered many 30-33' boats in the last 20 years.
My question is how strong is the modern keel (1995-2009) compared to boats made in the 70's and 80's. The reason I ask is, 25 years ago a friend bought a 1978 columbia 28' or 30' and I remember sailing with him on lake champlaine and we were motoring at between 5-6 knots and hit a rock about as big as a volkswagon and stopped on a dime.
He sailed the boat the rest of the season and when he hauled out the boat the only obvious damage was a dent in the keel. I remember looking at the keel, keel bolts and the hull for damage and all I remember is the dent in the keel.
My buddy sailed this boat for many years after (not sure if he ever hit hard like that again) and I was always amased at how the boat took the hit.
How would a modern day Hunter, Catalina, Beneteau handle such a incident?
Sigbear