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Keel Talk: Thick or Thin?

Should you go for a "thin keel" or just fair your keel? The first thing you need to be aware of is the "keel rule" in the 1999 Amendments to the Constitution .

Here is some information, opinion, and advice, no warranty, to anyone considering a keel change. Forgive me if this is stuff you know already; maybe some of it is new to some people.

Well-sailed boats like Lunchbox and Barnstormer (fat keel at the 99 Nationals) are fast with a fat, asymmetrical keels. Barnstormer is a particularly interesting case in point; next to the other gleaming white expensive keels in the Shilshole yard, the class champion's keel is an ugly, fat, lopsided (but lovable) mess of patches and cracks. (Barnstormer has since remodelled to a beautiful, thin keel.)

The class minima were taken from different boats -- the bottom two stations come from Roadrunner/Wildfire, but the third station up was thinner on Splash Tango so the third minimum does not make an existing keel shape taken with the bottom two minima. The idea was not to make existing keels illegal, but to bring order to chaos and give a target to anyone wanting to modify legally. (If you use the John Lashley templates, the bottom will come out too thin if you fair it down from the bottom-most template station; you must flair it ever slightly to make the 3 inch minimum at the bottom.) See the 1999 Amendments to the Constitution .

Happy sailing --

John Rahn

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