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Talk me out of buyi...
 
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Talk me out of buying a Hobie Getaway

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MN3
 MN3
(@MN3)
Posts: 7090
One Star Admiral
 

I have been reading hints about replacing some fittings to make taking apart and putting together easier.

Experience is your best method for decreasing rigging time
yes there are a few spots to replace ring-dings for quick pins but they are minimal savings and increased risk for error or mistaken demasting

I suggest you rig it a few dozen times and develop a system vs looking for ways to make it easier - esp if you are looking for mast up storage

Also wondering about some type of instrument/chart plotter with a VMG function.

no one on a beach cat uses a plotter
some use a gps/speedometer

issue is you need 2 screens or a pivoting system so you can read the data from each tack - and it should be self powered (or you end up adding lots of weight and drilling holes for 12v deep cells)

tic-tac is/was a pretty well known Speedometer (with some vmg ability) for beach cats - it has 2 screens and doesn't need 12v battery somewhere on the boat
The Velocitek SpeedPuck is also a highly used one
others wear a garmin watch

IMHO these are all distractions from sailing - when you are a solo sailor they are almost counter productive (taking your eyes of your course/sails). If you are racing pins / it's of no use. If distance racing ... follow the fleet - when you consistently win ... then you don't need it

as above ... i suggest you sail the boat a few dozen times before you worry too much about spending $ or "making it easier"

MN3

 
Posted : August 26, 2019 3:23 am
(@cirrussea)
Posts: 1
Newby
 

I've been a Hobie sailor since 1972, Had a branch dealership, Catamaran's Ltd. selling boats and renting in St. Augustine Florida for a number of years. 'Owned, sailed and at times in the '80's and '90's raced Hobie 14, 16 and 18's. Had a Monocat for a while, two Waves; a 17 later; a 21 and...Ta Da, a Prindle 18, the last one without daggerboards.
As I got a little older I started sailing Getaways. Mine have wings, later a spinnaker kit and I've generally dolled them up with the latest Harken everything and twin traps.
I love them. It's hard to pith pole one unless you are trying; impossible to turtle one so long as you have the foam bubble, they have a decent turn of speed but are very forgiving. And no damn daggerboards. The fin in place of those means you don't go to windward worth a damn unless you've got a good turn of speed and even then its not as good as a 16 or the 18 Prindle in my experience.
But the front tramp plus the wings means that you can carry a lot of kids and friends. For a Hobie its even fairly dry.
Now I life part of the year in Sandpoint Idaho, on the huge lake Pend O'reiile. I'm the only catamaran.
So of course I go out as uninvited guest for the Wednesday evening and Saturday morning races with the J-24s and -29s and Santanas and the like .... and of course murder them all over the course. I'm kind of The Pirate of O'Relle.
There are so many more options than there are now. If you looked up the Wikipedia segment on Beachcats, after the first paragraph, the one description of the history and all the models that came and went, that's me.
You'll enjoy your Getaway. Maybe when you are in port you'll find some mooohull racers to shut down πŸ™‚

 
Posted : June 19, 2021 5:14 pm
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