
Your Survival Guy wrote to you yesterday about yacht designer C. Raymond Hunt, the creator of the revolutionary hull deep-V (you can read part 1 here). โAccording to Hunt, two fiberglass 23โ prototypes were built. Each had a centerboard and an engine mounted amidships,โ writes Stan Grayson in Boat Crazy.
As many of you know, Newport, Rhode Island, was host to the Americaโs Cup races for decades. โDuring the 1958 Americaโs Cup trials off Newport, Rhode Island,โ explains Grayson, โone of these Hunters served as tender to the wooden Hunt-designed 12-Meter Eastener. The boat, flying the Eastern Yacht Clubโs burgee from a staff on the bow, was often driven by Huntโs son Josh, with Huntโs wife Barbara sometimes aboard. Thatโs where people first noticed the design. Those who noticed the boatโand they were manyโobserved how smoothly it ran in rough seas without reducing speed. At rest, it looked like a displacement hull, but then as it gained speed the boat lifted out of the water in a manner nobody had ever seen.โ
As an owner of a deep-V hull and frequent traveler of the seas outside my homeport Newport, RI, I can tell you the C. Raymond Hunt designed deep-V hull performs as advertised. Even in the roughest of seas, Your Survival Guy has felt comfortable knowing how Tom Sawyer handles rough water. It always seems to be rough and windy off Brenton Point in Newport. Perfect for 12-Meter sailing and a Hunt-designed deep-V hull.
Action Line: Donโt let poor hull design, or portfolio design for that matter, keep you on the docks. When youโre ready to talk, letโs talk. Email me at ejsmith@yoursurvivalguy.com.
Read: Your Survival Guy: Hunt Built a Better Boat
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.