Daggerboard Pros and Cons
PROS
1. A daggerboarded cat will sail consistently higher into the wind than
a
cat with keels. Typically between 5 to 7 degrees higher. This
added speed and pointing ability represents a significant safety feature
when cruising because it enables you to claw off a lee shore or to
arrive at an upwind destination with far greater alacrity. Sometimes you
cannot "run for cover" - you must "beat for cover."
2. A daggerboarded cat, all things being equal, will sail at least 2
knots faster, on average, than a catamaran with keels simply because it
isn't carrying the enormous fixed hydrodynamic drag (i.e. wetted
surface) of two long and deep fixed keels. This added speed is a
significant safety feature for long-range cruising. Not only are long
passages cut shorter, reducing exposure to adverse weather, but should
one encounter adverse weather it is much easier to either run from it or
avoid it entirely with proper weather routing. A faster boat always
increases one's options, and therefore increases safety, when cruising.
3. A daggerboarded cat typically draws 2 to 2.5 feet less water than a
cat
with keels. As such, the sailing grounds and potential anchorages
available to a cat with daggerboards are considerably larger than those
available to a keel cat.
4. In extremely severe seas, daggerboards enable the skipper to adjust
the balance of his catamaran by raising and lowering the boards. When
sailing in large cross-seas you typically raise the leeward daggerboard
entirely and lower the windward board half-way to prevent being tripped
over by a breaking wave. A keel cat is stuck with the keels down, all
the time - as such, there is no way to prevent the boat from "tripping
over herself" in storm-force conditions.
CONS
1. Daggerboards are very costly to construct. A builder must create dual
daggerboards as well as dual daggerboard trunks, along with the winches
and pulleys to raise and lower them. Dual daggerboards add about $30,000
to the construction cost of a 45 foot catamaran.
2. Daggerboarded cats are not a good idea for bare-boat chartering
because bare-boat sailors run aground a lot. Even if they are told to
raise the daggerboards when they are not beating, they forget-which
results in broken daggerboards. Charter sailors do not care about
performance, so there is no sense offering them a costly option they
will very likely break.
3. Daggerboards that are not carefully installed by a professional
shipyard can rattle in their trunks. This is annoying. A well built cat
will not have this problem.
4. If you are not a careful navigator and operate near shallow waters
with your daggerboard (s) in the down position and plow into a hard reef
at high speed, you will do serious damage to your daggerboard and
possibly also to the bottom of your boat. While most daggerboarded cats
have mini-skegs to protect the rudders and saildrives from a grounding,
a high speed collision with a reef could do major damage to the bottom
of your catamaran.
5. Daggerboard trunks take away a modest amount of interior room from
the inside of each hull.
THE
MULTIHULL COMPANY
BROKERS FOR NEW AND USED MULTIHULLS WORLDWIDE
Dionne@multihullcompany.com
www.multihullcompany.com