This comes under the category of "Nothing to do on a Saturday Night in March"US Sailing has an on-line calculator that allows you to determine key design aspects of a boat. http://www.sailingusa.info/cal__avs.htmI'm most interested in the "Angle of Vanishing Stability" as they relate to water ballast boats. Using the following variablesH260Beam 8.9 ftDisplacement 5000 lbsWt of Ballast 2000 Draft 1.5Screening Stability: 30.88. Angle of Vanishing Stability: 129.16H250Beam 8.5Displacement 4550Ballast 1300Draft 1.5Screening stability: 40.69; Angle of Vanishing Stability 123.03MAC 26XBeam 7.8Displacement 4000Ballast 1450Draft 1.5Screening stability 28.19, Angle of Vanishing Stability 131.99According to the site, angle of vanishing stability is the angle to which the boat can heel and still right itself. A dingy will have a stability range of about 80 degrees; an inland water boat should have a stability range of 100 degrees, and an offshore boat of at least 120 degrees. Boats which have a stability angle of less than 140 degrees may be left floating upside down once capsized. Boats with a higher angle will usually right themselvesNot sure what all these numbers mean. Is there an engineer or naval architect out that that can shed some light here? Can you use these numbers to determine the safest of these three boats? Or should I just watch some TV and forget it?