We hauled the boat last weekend and painted the bottom with Pettit Trinidad hard paint, waxed the hull and changed the zincs. We should be good for another 3-4 years as that is how long the last bottom paint lasted.
We had the hoist driver give us a weight on the boat..... 20,000lbs, 8,000 on the front 12,000 on the rear. I knew she was heavy as I have read previous posts about the C34's weight, but the total really surprised me. We only had 20 gallons of water and 12 gallons of fuel, a 2000 watt Honda generator, 10' rubber boat with 2HP Honda, and misc. other items on board, nothing with any real weight.
Now I know why she feels like a much bigger and heavier boat, and why it takes heavy wind well.
Tom - I guess I don't feel too bad about my 18,000#. It must be that one-ton, bomb-proof full enclosure you have around your cockpit. Or maybe all that canvas has soaked up a lot of the rain. You sure you put on zincs and not depleted uranium?
Craig
guys,
take a look at the discussion of weight and displacement------
http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,3213.0.html
My impression after two seasons with a C34 MK I is she sails much bigger and reacts to wind and waves like a heavier displacement boat. I thought this might be due to having a moderate sized genoa - a 130%. If like the MK II, it never occurred to me it could simply be a heavier boat. Our C34 sits high on her waterline despite full gear, equipment, and tankage. A nice feature of the design, the capacity for load in pounds/inch is rated at 1,251 and will absorb a lot of equipment and fluids before she sinks noticeably lower in the water. :D
Guys , Susan and D.Gill : This is a C34 discussion that started back about 1990.
Here's what we know for sure : Gerry Douglas admitted that Catalina missed the design draft of the C34 that was published at (Wing keel) 3' 10". Catalina restated that the draft of a C34 was really 4' 3".
In your High School Physics class you learned Archimedes principle. It simply states that an object will displace its weight in water equal to the weight of the object. Therefore if the C34 was designed to have a draft of 3'10" and it sinks down into the water deeper, because it weighs more than the design weight of 12,550 lbs (est.)
The other known : is that marina operators seldom (if ever) have their "strain gages" recalaberated. These gages are the instruments that will give you the weight readings. Cranes and other industrial machines are required by most States/localities to have their strain gages recaliberated periodically and there is a certified sticker on the machine with the date it was done.
When that Catalina announcement (of the increase in draft) was announced my C34 was on the hard and I immediately measured the draft which was 4" 5". My boat is probably loaded with more items than most. It wasn't a surprise to me, as I'd touched bottom using the 3'10" draft number.
I'll guess that a C34 is between 15 & 16,000 lbs loaded for cruising.
These are my thoughts and experience on the gross weight (displacement) issue and don't believe that I'm that far off!! :wink:
After reading some of the older posts it appears that the MK11's are coming in at 17,000-18,000lbs. Could it be that the change in the aft hull design above the water line of the MK11 added 1000-2000 lbs. to the boat?
I suspect the gauges were not calibrated on the lift that was used on our boat, the operator also did not subtract for any part of the hoist.
I really expected to see a weight in the 15,000-16,000 range as Ron has stated on multiple occasions.
Craig, you know the Admiral would never give up all of that canvas, even if it does add a ton to the boat.... and the canvas was dry when we weighed.....LOL
By increasing the displacement to 17,000 and adding 1" to the waterline for the additional pounds, the standard C34 ratios of a SR/FK model would be modified as below:
Performance Comparison
LOA Catalina 34 SR/Fin 34.5
Cat34 + 34.5
LWL Catalina 34 SR/Fin 29.8
Cat34 + 30.8
Beam Catalina 34 SR/Fin 11.75
Cat34 + 11.75
Displacement Catalina 34 SR/Fin 11950
Cat34 + 17000
Sail Area Catalina 34 SR/Fin 564
Cat34 + 564
Capsize Ratio Catalina 34 SR/Fin 2.06 Less than 2 indicates good stability in bad conditions
Cat34 + 1.83
Hull Speed Catalina 34 SR/Fin 7.31
Cat34 + 7.44
Sail Area to Catalina 34 SR/Fin 17.26 Questionable metric. <13 is probably a motor sailor >18 considered high performance
Displacement Cat34 + 13.65
Displacement to LWL Catalina 34 SR/Fin 202 200 considered medium weight boat
Cat34 + 260 300 considered heavy boat
LWL to Beam Catalina 34 SR/Fin 2.54 range is generally 2.3 to 3.0
Cat34 + 2.62
Motion Comfort Catalina 34 SR/Fin 22.05 Range is 5-60+ Higher is more stable
Cat34 + 30.68
Pounds/Inch Catalina 34 SR/Fin 1251 amount of weight required to sink the boat 1"
Cat34 + 1293
Credit to Carl's Sail Calculator at http://www.image-ination.com/sailcalc.html
So, what that means is that I should run right out and add more weight to my boat because
1. The waterline is lengthened, so I can go faster!
2. The comfort ratio is better, so it sails better.
Whoopie! Now, more tools or more anchor chain???? :D
I added some definitions to the metrics. Not so sure you want to add too much more weight....according to the SA to Disp figure, the C34+ is approaching motor sailor status :?
LOL - it's always a fun exercise to play with ratios! So, Stu can add the weight on and Ken can put up a huge genny! We'll be sailing like an Cape Dory before you know it! :D