I would hope the speed limit does not apply to sail. I intend to try my best to see eight or nine knots off the wind.
Those rudder brackets better not fall off.
I have Ida rudders and they are supposed to be very strong. I sail with them at any adjustment I feel is good for the depth. If I'm in two feet of water they are all the way up. The boats usually only going two or three knots at that time.
It does make steering more difficult, so I ease the main.
Flinging this boat off large waves in 20 or 30 knots is probably not that smart unless you reworked the entire steering system. Certainly regular use fifty miles offshore requires it. By reworked I mean solid laminant glass rudders with bronze pivot bushings, custom rudder brackets made from SS twice as thick, better helm mechanism and maybe hydraulic steering. Plus bushings on all moving parts. (don't forget to glass the hull to deck joint, add some skegs, running backstays, upsized wire, and perhaps a couple hundred pounds more ballast
If your going fifty miles offshore...why a Mac?
The boat is pleasant enough for an afternoon in the gulf stream, and today I took mine for her first ever out of site of land sail. But the motion gets uncomfortable after a while as it would on any small boat. At least she's not hideously wet under sail. But we both prefer water about ten or less feet deep, in the lee of an island where breaking a rudder is unlikely.
Ixneigh
