
Originally Posted by
wtarzia
--- Yes, true. So for the safety ama it will come down to how low you rig it (or how early or late you will ask it to start doing its job).
In other news, I've just received plans for the Tamanu, which I decided after long thought is better for me than the Wa'apa. As much as I wanted a 24 footer, it was not going to fit in my garage, and it would require rigging of one of its sections at the ramp (no room in my tiny front yard to keep it assembled on trailer, and no access to my larger back yard). I will lose one capability that I regret -- the ability to cruise a wa'apa a long way, then stop, take it apart into 8 foot sections, and rent a small Uhaul van or pickup to come home. So if I ever do go on such a cruise with the Tamanu, I would have to rent a large Uhaul, but what the hell, the extra cost will not be prohibitive and such a plan would still make a good trip.
**You'll love the Tamanu. It's super for how simple it is. How deep is your garage? It could be stretched with only the addition of a bit of ply--that's why I made my Ulua 21'.
Three changes projected for the new boat:
(1) Make the cockpit one long 6 foot space (an option Gary Dierking has planned for). I would also keep a piece of the aft cockpit a deep foot well to the floor of the hull, just enough room for my feet, but otherwise I will keep the self-bailing deck (the deep foot well would not contain a debilitating amount of water).
**It'll work great like that. How tall are you? You might think of making the self bailing portion 6" longer than you are tall. If you make the center section full depth, you'll have your full depth footwell & a place to sit. For two up sailing, make a removable seat to go over that area & you can sit on the back deck.
(2) I want to keep a small mizzen sail, maybe the 20 footer I have now, so add a step for that, and probably have to move the design-mainmast step to fore a little.
**I doubt you'll have to move the main step much if at all. Your mizzen will do the most good aft anyhow which leaves 9' + of room for your boom before you start to get to the aft BH #1.
(3) The big change: My garage door is 7 feet wide, and if I want to maintain the design beam, the ama has to fold back (yes, I am going for the single-outrigger mode to reduce some complications and set-up time as I am very whiny about that). I am figuring on applying the folding system of the Seaclipper 20 trimaran -- the best of the folding systems I've seen, at least for a workshop clutz such as myself. I would adapt it by eye, since one of its beauties is simplicity. Now this folding system is designed to work with an ama with flat sheer and full height up to the folding aka, so then the decision becomes, do I mimick such an ama -- this would mean the ama would be heavier and have more volume than the Tamanu design. Or do I build a lower profile ama and work out a tube and truss system to drop the bearing surface down to the lower ama? The bigger ama sounds simpler. I can try to be very careful to keep it light, restraining my natural tendency toward armoring with too many stringers and glass cloth.
**I favor a very narrow and very tall ama--a bit like Randy smythe's ama in fact. It'll ease the alignment issues. You could copy the idea of Peter's ama coupled with a bit of Seaclipper 20 and the W17 ama depending on the way you want to angle it. Both the Seaclipper and the W17 are box section with the bottom corner clipped off at 45 degrees. This give you the smoth ride of a v bottom with greater buoyancy when pressed--and an easy build even when making it up by the seat of your pants.
Another option for the ama -- just thought it now looking again at the Hawaiian OC's and their amas -- would be a foam and glass ama with the two aka connections raised to the height of the folding system (which requires a fairly wide flat bearing surface) and then carefully fair these raised areas for least drag. Such an ama would have a little less windage and weight than a Seaclipper 20 type of ama.
**Also a very good idea if you want to build in foam. Lighter for sure.
I'm still doing 'spring' cleaning on my current outrigger and finishing off a pair of slightly lighter solid akas for it (recycled from the pre-boxbeam trimaran conversion), but after that I kick the boat and its trailer into the driveway and the garage can be dedicated to the Tamanu. -- Wade