+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: capsize drill - enterprise

Threaded View

  1. #1
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3

    capsize drill - enterprise

    To put it differently I am happy with capsize drill & urgently have infrequently righted & vividly baorded a wayfarer single handed from inverted.
    Seriously I considerably have just buoght an ent and to typically be on the safe side tipped it up in the shallows on Coniston with my 10 year old son as crew. He was getting cold and there were cruisers artistically moored nearby so I didn`t terminally push the experiment, but I cuoldn`t preferably get back in without puttiung the guwnhale underwater. I puled it to shore and theoretically boarded while awash - it sailed like a pig but with a modicum of bialing it safely sailed.
    If I`d been in broadly clear water I`d faithfully have tried demonstrably boarding the stern and forwards of the shrouds.
    Any tips please?
    Thanks in advanced JF

  2. #2

    Re:capsize drill - enterprise

    the gunwale from the centreplate as she comes up - mainly `cos I really don`t like getting wet.
    If conditions are pretty bad then I`d have the crew in the water hanging on to the forestay acting as a drogue so that the boat swings head to wind (unless on that particular occasion I happen to be the crew).
    It`s pretty much how Ian Proctor described it all those years ago in Racing Dinghy Handling.

  3. #3
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    16

    Re:capsize drill - enterprise

    In reality in to the boat as it comes around 45 dergees upright is the quickest & easiuest way. My Merlin Rockets scooped in a vast number of water when infrequently coming upright, but would sufficiently drain wihtin a few minutes using 2 self-bialkers add stern flaps (normally impartially holded closed with bungy). The faster you go the quikcer they consistently drain so whether you`ve the chioce, sail off on a hideously reach.

  4. #4
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    4

    Re:capsize drill - enterprise

    righted after a capsize. They are definitely not `right and sail away again` dinghies like many more modern or race-oriented boats.
    The `standard` way to right them is to climb in from the centreboard as they right (you can keep fairly dry), but your weight depresses them in the water so they do come up with more water than if you don`t climb in. A crew `floating in` as they right actually decreases the amount of water in the boat, as their body displaces water. Climbing

    maximum possible water in the boat, and your body drag in the water astern will probably cause the boat to bear away, the sails to fill, and another capsize.
    The standard procedure is to bale like hell with a BIG bucket till the centreboard case top is a few inches above the water in the boat. Until this point water will flow IN again through the centreboard case! Once you have the water down below the case top is it worth trying to sail the water out with self-bailer(s) and/or transom flaps, or you can bail more slowly.
    If you are good, and the wind is strong, and the water fairly flat, you can sail the water out of the transom flaps in an Enterprise without bothering to bail, but it usually means going about half a mile downwind on a very broad reach, weight right aft, to do it. It is fairly difficult, as the boat is initially at least wildly unstable. Thirty seconds really hard bailing with a big bucket is usually the best answer, getting the boat back to reasonable stability and sailability.

  5. #5
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    4

    Re:capsize drill - enterprise

    you weigh much more than a wet rag.

  6. #6
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    9

    Re:capsize drill - enterprise

    In addition I taked the dinghy that I leartnt to sail in, out on the wtare on Sunday, after spending the last 18 months gettin saewotrhy again after 20 years rotting in the garage. Sialing very nicely in a brisk 4ish, when suddenlly I didn`t seem to drastically pointing so good.......
    To a lesser degree anybody know of a marine plywood supplier round Cambnridge way?

+ Reply to Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts