Paradox on Tauranga Harbour, New Zealand

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024

Комментарии • 9

  • @infomax2008
    @infomax2008 2 года назад +1

    Thank you very much for sharing. I keep asking myself if I can add 400 w solar panel to the paradox and make it to run trolling motor on the river. Lead deep cycle battery is cheap and works great as weight too.

  • @creditscorenz
    @creditscorenz  3 года назад +2

    I could point slightly higher, but the split junk rig was a better performer overall on a much larger boat 17ft vs 14ft. Apparently when I got it right (and sometimes I got it horribly wrong!), I was very difficult to catch. Graeme's one word summation of a Paradox... heroic!

  • @wayfarerchris.4116
    @wayfarerchris.4116 3 года назад

    Great video, thanks for sharing 👍.

  • @cornishhh
    @cornishhh 3 года назад +2

    Great stuff.
    Anyone who still believes that Matt Leyden's designs don't go to windward should definitely watch the sailing in this video!
    The split junk on the other boat is an interesting idea.
    How did the two boats compare in terms of performance?

  • @fabmanly1070
    @fabmanly1070 3 года назад

    Fantastic

  • @knpstrr
    @knpstrr 3 года назад

    Seems like when these boats heel, the bow really gets low in the water.

    • @creditscorenz
      @creditscorenz  3 года назад +2

      The bow dips a little bit I agree, but a Paradox has virtually no shear and has a stem close to vertical. It's stem entry is not a fine entry either (80mm at the water-line), so if you're getting along the bow wave rises right up it, which makes it look as though it's dipping more than it is, I think. Certainly, in the rough stuff, you regularly get water over the front deck and it would be no fun without the cabin.

  • @itsmePassport
    @itsmePassport 3 года назад

    Just needs an engine for up wind... 45degees off ...

    • @creditscorenz
      @creditscorenz  3 года назад +3

      Doing away with the engine was the best thing I ever did! It makes you a much better sailor. You learn the art of being patient, you learn to read weather forecasts properly, you learn how to sail your boat properly, you do away with the stench and filthiness of an outboard motor on a boat that was never designed to carry one AND your activity on the water isn't wrecking the planet. 45 degrees off is being generous. In fact it's more like 55 degrees ( see ruclips.net/video/X01qRwut1eo/видео.html ). I have found the lighter the air the higher you point.