I had a Mac 25, and in every out of the way place, everywhere was crammed with blocks of Styrofoam. In tests, Macs float, rather than sink, because of this safety feature.
On my recently acquired Clipper Marine, when I look into holds, dark foreboding places, all I see is nothing but darkness.
I am not big on the fact that someday, in a moment of bad weather, bad luck, or whatever, and the water comes rushing in, all the air goes rushing out, and down she goes.
Lets say I started saving water bottles. All shapes and sizes. These would go into the nooks and crannies on my Clipper Marine Aft Cabin Ketch. I figure it will take hundreds.
A gallon jug will float about 8 pounds of fiberglass. Lets say my boat has a weight on the water of 4000 pounds, that means I need 500 1 gallon plastic bottles to keep her at the top of the lake, swamped. I do not have room for 500 one gallon jugs. Doubt I could hide 100 of them inside. Does that mean I can do nothing to float her swamped? Would stowing away as many empty jugs as I can, help, or do nothing?
On my recently acquired Clipper Marine, when I look into holds, dark foreboding places, all I see is nothing but darkness.
I am not big on the fact that someday, in a moment of bad weather, bad luck, or whatever, and the water comes rushing in, all the air goes rushing out, and down she goes.
Lets say I started saving water bottles. All shapes and sizes. These would go into the nooks and crannies on my Clipper Marine Aft Cabin Ketch. I figure it will take hundreds.
A gallon jug will float about 8 pounds of fiberglass. Lets say my boat has a weight on the water of 4000 pounds, that means I need 500 1 gallon plastic bottles to keep her at the top of the lake, swamped. I do not have room for 500 one gallon jugs. Doubt I could hide 100 of them inside. Does that mean I can do nothing to float her swamped? Would stowing away as many empty jugs as I can, help, or do nothing?
