Mark Prouty wrote:Dimitri,
I don't understand why weight in the bow would make the boat more unstable. I'm concerned about this. I was thinking or stowing most of my heavier gear towards the bow assuming that it would improve the way the boat planes.
I was also interested in a mod with the fuel tank in the bow.
http://macgregorsailors.com/cgi-bin/mod ... record=174
How much to you concern yourself on balancing gear port and starboard? Does 150 or 200 pounds more on one side cause a problem?
Mark, I actually discovered the phenomenon the very first time I went out and anchored (stopped my forward motion in a decent blow) The boat didn't come with a manual, but later I downloaded it and I think it also warns about too much weight in the bow.
As with an airplane, you can be well under the payload of the craft and still have a lethal balance problem. On a Mac, it shouldn't be lethal, but it can put you into one hull of a roll oscillation or a wobble if you like. Who knows, that oscillation may even cause a capsize if there is a serious side-to-side weight imbalance disrupting the equilibrium. The boat is designed to "balance" on the flatter part of the hull further aft (otherwise, it will seesaw on a fulcrum). With 150 lbs of weights at the very tip of the bow (it was down low and I don't think that makes much of a difference for this particular problem), that was a very large amount of weight way forward of the center of longitudinal stability in relation to other weight on the boat (mostly me and the motor). If I had had another couple people on board sitting in the cockpit, it probably would never have happened.
So, the issue is balance, as long as there is enough weight to the rear to balance out what you are putting in front, you will be ok. There are ways to calculate that btw, you just have to figure out the CoS (same as CoG I believe) and then do calculations based on the weight and the distance from the CoS. Its part of pilot training when figuring out weight and balance before you fly an airplane.
If you don't have enough weight rear, I definitely would not recommend putting too much weight forward, and neither does the owners manual. It was damned near impossible to haul out the anchor with over 350 lbs on the bow causing the roll oscillations. My bigfoot is about 255# too. I would say the roll was going from one side to the other side in about half a second (1 second cycle with maybe 30 degrees of roll back and forth)...pretty freaky. With the weights out of the bow, I've never had that problem again, but I also put the boards down in situations like that too. Funny thing is that the dealer put the dumbbells in and was doing that with all the Macs they were selling. At least they were jammed into the foam and then covered with the screwed down hatch all the way forward in the V-berth...so they probably wouldn't have gotten loose.