A couple weeks ago when the weather was really hot I took this boat to a gravel pit behind my house and spent some time intentionally dumping it and practicing reentry. I was happy to find that secondary stability remained solid until the knuckle went under water, just like the software said it would.
I was not happy to find that the wide seat I built had a tendency to trap one of my legs when I capsized in the kneeling position. It was easy to free the leg and I don't think I'd ever find myself married to the boat but I can see myself wrenching a knee going over unexpectedly in a real life capsize where I'm not consciously paying attention to whether or not my leg is hanging up.
So I built a new seat:
20150725_001 by Alan, on Flickr
I have this seat in a couple of my other boats and while it's quite a bit narrower I still find it quite comfortable. It helps that I'm pretty narrow too.
Clearance on the new seat:
20150725_003 by Alan, on Flickr
The wider seat sitting on top for comparison:
20150725_004 by Alan, on Flickr
The naked hull as it sits now weighs 48.2 pounds:
20150725_002 by Alan, on Flickr
Alan
I was not happy to find that the wide seat I built had a tendency to trap one of my legs when I capsized in the kneeling position. It was easy to free the leg and I don't think I'd ever find myself married to the boat but I can see myself wrenching a knee going over unexpectedly in a real life capsize where I'm not consciously paying attention to whether or not my leg is hanging up.
So I built a new seat:
20150725_001 by Alan, on Flickr
I have this seat in a couple of my other boats and while it's quite a bit narrower I still find it quite comfortable. It helps that I'm pretty narrow too.
Clearance on the new seat:
20150725_003 by Alan, on Flickr
The wider seat sitting on top for comparison:
20150725_004 by Alan, on Flickr
The naked hull as it sits now weighs 48.2 pounds:
20150725_002 by Alan, on Flickr
Alan