PHRF and Golfing
PHRF is a handicap rating based solely on the physical properties of the boat in question – it has nothing to do with the skill of the crew nor the condition of the sails. Golf handicaps would be similar only if the clubs (and not the golfer) were handicapped. The example would be a person swinging a Big Bertha would give strokes to someone using a set of Kmart specials even if that person was Tiger Woods.All other things being equal, a lower PHRF boat will out perform a higher one. Along with LOA and LWL, draft, displacement, ratio of ballast to displacement, principal rig dimensions, sail area etc, are factored into the equation. Everyone likes to complain about PHRF and it’s lack of “fairness” but no one yet has come up with a universally acceptable alternative to it. IMHO, a rating difference of up to ten seconds isn’t going to make a big difference, so pick the boat you like. But if you are looking at 30 seconds to a minute – that’s a noticeable performance difference that isn’t going to get fixed by buying new sails and sheets. Simply stated, PHRF gets smaller as the LOA/LWL increases. Lighter boats and those with a bigger ballast to displacement ratio will be lower than heavier ones with the same length. Boats with taller masts, larger sail plans and fractional rigs will be faster than mast head rigs and standard rigs. Let’s leave genoa size out of the discussion as they tend to be treated as an adjustment to the basic PHRF number. (for example, Freya had three seconds taken off her base number because my genoa is slightly oversized). Some PHRF will make an adjustment for spinnakers so that they can race against non spinnaker boats.Ketches and yawls look cool but they have two performance problems. They tend to be a heavy displacement along with a full (or skegged) keel, making them slower than a sloop of the same LOA. And their two mast set up (and that full keel again) won’t give you the same tight tacking angle that you would get with a sloop. If you’re single handing, tacking to windward all day is going to get real old, real quick in a ketch.To put things into perspective, here are the PHRF ratings for your boats (and a couple of others) from here in San Francisco. Catalina 30 – 180; C34 – 147; C36 – 141; Cheoy Lee Luders 36 – 198; Hunter 37 Cutter – 138; Endeavour 37 – 180; Crealock 34 (cutter rigged double ender) – 198. As you can see they are radically different designs with radically different performance ratings. Now for comparison, Areodyne 38 – 36; and Farr 40 – 6. You just gotta ask yourself one question – Do I want to cruise really, really fast or do I want to be really, really comfortable. Good luck in your search and hope everything works out with the insurance company on your C30.