GoodChance":27ycij57 said:
Ran 17mph in a 4-6ft sea? In a Parker? In 20-30kts of wind? I'd like to see a video of that one. I think that the stringers, hull and cabin would again be 3 pieces after that ride.
I don't think you would see a 42ft Duffy run 17kts in a 4-6ft sea.
I have a Parker too and think a great deal of the boat but sometimes the tale becomes pretty tall leaving the causual observer and uninformed wondering "why can't I run 20kts in a 4ft sea in my brand new $50k Parker like the Internet reports".
We've run our 42' Wesmac at 9 knots in 6-8 and 30kts of wind, and that was really awful. Literally a free-fall off every 7th wave, green water over the bow, next to zero vis... There's no way a Parker could handle 15 knots in 4-6 for a sustained period. The Wesmac is a darn-good sea boat (Some say better than the old downeast designs, Duffy, H&H, etc), and 6x the boat of a 25' parker.
We've also run the Wesmac at 4 knots (having the throttle each wave) in 6-10 and 45+ knots of wind (the waves hadn't caught up yet, were getting their tops clipped off, foam and spume covering the windows)... Trust me, a Parker would have pitchpoled even trying to make headway. We got caught by a 12 footer, and the boat literally slid backwards, and buried the back 15' of deck in the ocean. If we hadn't put it in the corner, I'm pretty sure we'd have had big problems with that one. We were caught off of Lubec, Maine, trying to head back to Boston, and it was blowing a SW gale. It took 90 minutes to limp to Cutler, ME, where we spent the night watching the snow blow sideways and hearing the surf crashing on Fairy Head.
I'm a huge Parker fan, but there are simply limits to what any boat that size can handle. Parker builds a great boat, but its not gonna last in big seas at any sort of speed. Read about what happened to the pilot boat "Can Do" from Gloucester in Mike Tougias' book "Ten Hours Til Dawn"... Its an incredible read, and 100% true.
Also, remember that the weather reports of "wave height" are the significant wave heights. There can be height multiplication of 2x or even 3x depending on the conditions. So if they are calling for 4-6, you can expect that one in every 1000 waves might be 12'. Seen that plenty of times, especially if there are multiple sources of waves (offshore storm, local squall against the tide, and the remnants of another blow from a different direction). Scary stuff, I tell ya.