Estimated around 130 degrees
The website below estimates the angle of vanishing stability based on a formula in "Adlard Coles' Heavy Weather Sailing". I am not sure of the "hull depth" of the h27: at 1.25 feet the angle of vanishing stability is around 127 degrees, at 1.5 feet, it is 132 degrees. Capsize screen is 1.94.These results show that the h27's design is capable of taking its crew through a heavy storm with breaking waves with the capability of rolling the boat. But it was not manufactured with that use in mind. For instance, the ports in our '77 model are simply not strong enough, and a modification is needed to prevent leaks through the lazarette for another example. Improvements to the rig, sails, storage, fuel and water, safety, ground tackle, and communications systems would also be needed. Such improvements would also be needed by most of the production cruisers built over the past 30 years.If your intended use is coastal cruising, then the 75-84 h27 is one of the better designs available for a couple in its size range.Developments in the past 20 years have emphasized initial stability and cabin volume at the cost of stability in extreme conditions. This shows up in capsize screens from 2.0 to 2.3 for modern designs below 30 feet. I believe this accurately reflects the use intended by 97 percent of buyers. I prefer the sailing ride and looks of the 70's boats with their longer overhangs and more attractive lines. And I sail on the Great Lakes where I can make it to port before a big storm can build up waves that could capsize the boat.I'm not sure whether John Cherubini, or any other designer would have calculated the angle of vanishing stability in the 70's. The design of the "Queen of the Fleet," the h33 of that era would clearly make a great blue water cruiser (with all of the need for modifications described above.) But I certainly understand that Hunter does not maintain and publish design parameters for products they shipped 20-30 years ago!DavidLady Lillie