I just got this pic of Sam Bell’s KHSD 38 tri down under. Out there doing it again.
All posts by kurt
More Stiletto
I got this note today. Interesting.
“Dear Mr. Hughes,
I found a post online from you that refers to a confidential design bid proposal request.
It is highly unprofessional for you to start posting complaints about us and referring to a confidential bid request.
I also do not remember offering to pay anything for Bid Requests on the Project.
The project is ongoing and any damages from your releasing inappropriate confidential information may come back to haunt you.
Please immediately remove you references to our Bid Proposal and the “New Stiletto 10 Meter”, as you do not have trademark ownership or license to do so.
Regards,
Jay M. Phillips Managing Director – Stiletto Manufacturing, Inc.
Jay,
I tip my hat. Well played. The project is already generating controversy buzz and it is just beginning. Only problem is nobody reads this blog.
I went back over the request email. There is nothing about confidential. Zero. And I see no complaints. Just reporting what I saw. Is illegal for me to discuss a design? Were my points not good? If I do several hours of unpaid work for you, surely I get an opinion on it. And glancing back, they look good to me.
I’ve done a few start up projects. It might have been useful to listen to some of my notes in the extensive emails we exchanged and the blog page. A combination of my skill doing more with less, my stylist’s eye and Rafi’s folding system would have been killer.
Searunner Construction Manual
This is very cool. Download the Searunner Construction Manual.
Probably nothing in it applies to boatbuilding now, but there is no other book with better sense of the adventure of building your own multi boat. Or sailing your multi-I remember something about always assuming your motor will die and being ready for that.
http://outrigmedia.com/outrig/searunnerconstructionmanual/
Its like getting the Whole Earth Catalog digitally.
New 79 Daycharter
Out There Doing It
Still slammed here but a couple of quick ones.
Just got little story and pic of one of my cats from Jock, out there doing it.
“I’m still sailing around the Caribbean since 2010 on Unleaded a KHSD 30 ft cat.She’s still a delight.I like telling my “condomaran”friends that it took a year to use the ten gallons of gasoline I bought in Puerto Rico as Unleaded sails so well I only motor into and sometimes out of anchorages (sometimes sail in and out)because “I CAN”.
Met a nice young couple from Maine on the CM version of the 30 ft cat last spring in St. Maarten. (James and Emily) neat to see another KH design.
This year I made a mold and raised the hatches over the central part of the hulls a bit(2 or 3 cm)so now unless it’s a driving rain I can leave the hatches open a crack for ventilation as the rain streams away from the opening.
Here in the Caribbean I can still buy two stroke cycle outboards so I’m replacing my Suzuki 9.9 4 stoke cycles with Tohatsu 9.8 two stroke’s.That should take 20kg or so out of the boat.
The pic is looking towards St.Georges Granada”.
Trilogy on Parts Unknown
Trilogy IV, the KHSD 48 daycharter cat that Kevin built was Tony Bourdain’s vehicle for a short bit on the famous food/travel show. Right near the end. http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/12/travel/hawaii-bourdain-parts-unknown/
Sorry for Going Dark
Sorry everybody. Two rush 75 cats designs and a 58 major revision have left me in triage state. And a new 65 coming up next week. Blog here has suffered, and there are lots of new stories.
I will try to load a couple of quick ones.
New 32 Tri Build in N. Calif.
New Dragonfly Amas
Race To Alaska
Interesting event. Tracker link http://tracker.r2ak.com/
I see that the two most heavily media flogged boats, the Bieker proa and the little cat from Port Townsend have dropped out and never did well.
It really only looked like a very long Shaw Island Classic to me. Agility would be far more important than speed as I see it. The wind will be from 10 different directions in 10 minutes and you may have to tack 5 times in that ten minutes to dodge eddies or kelp beds. And typically it all seems to be uphill. Short tacking is often the rule. In this kind of race I expect that the old 34′ Smoholla might have been quicker than the F40 Geko. Imagine having to move the mast every tack as on the Bieker proa? What were they thinking?
That says 30′ or so trimaran to me. They tack faster than the cats. You see it firsthand at races in the San Juans. And with all the kelp I’m sure a foiler is off the menu most of the time.
And when there is no wind, I learned in the Tasmania race that you can move a small multi pretty well rowing.