[C320-list] Follow-up on Eta

John Morrison sail-ability at sympatico.ca
Tue Nov 17 19:22:33 PST 2020


Great report. I’m becoming more and more convinced that Catalinas are one of the best production boats being built today. There are other pretty boats out there, but my sense is that they put barely enough material into the hulls to keep the water out! I’m proud to own one. 
JohnM 
1999#574

Sent from my iPhone

> On Nov 17, 2020, at 10:02 PM, Jack Brennan <jackbrennan at bellsouth.net> wrote:
> 
> So I have to remark on how odd it was to call Catalina and have Gerry Douglas, the boat designer, answer the phone directly.
> 
> He had a simple opinion: If there is cracked fiberglass, you have problems. If you don’t, go sailing. I wasn’t able to find any cracks. Neither did the marine surveyor Geico sent out to look at the boat. 
> 
> The surveyor did say it was the correct strategy to call the insurance company if you have any doubts. That way, there is a record if something goes wrong later and it can be traced back to the incident you reported.
> 
> I am impressed at how strongly the 320 is built. Often, deck cleats give way even before lines snap. These held firmly through 12-14 hours of winds tropical storm to hurricane strength, with waves bashing the boat and putting great strain on them.
> 
> Then there’s the fact the my 320 knocked over a piling with no apparent damage to the rub rail. Pretty impressive. Another piling spent some time bumping against the starboard stern with no discernable damage. No cracks. No oil canning. Didn’t even lose gelcoat.
> 
> Now, if I could only get it to go to windward in a steep chop …
> 
> Jack Brennan
> Sonas, 1998 Catalina 320
> Tierra Verde, Fl.
> 
> 
> 
> Sent from Mail for Windows 10
> 


More information about the C320-list mailing list