I had a 6 person coastal commander mounted on my previous boat in a cradle
with a hydrostatic release. It was a power boat with plenty of room on the
deck forward of the house. The cradle mount is very robust when mounted
directly to the deck and the retaining straps are probably strong enough to
rip the cradle from it's mounts. I am not familiar with the layout of your
boat. I have room on my deck aft of the cockpit to mount it and that is my
plan although I have honestly not measured it yet. My only other option IMO
is the deck forward of the mast. My cabin roof bulge ends at the mast. That
would keep it out of the way except when handling the anchor and out of my
line of sight.

 

Best of luck 

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of David via
CnC-List
Sent: Thursday, March 05, 2015 11:12 AM
To: CNC CNC
Subject: Re: Stus-List Mounting Liferaft on a 41

 

Yes the mount has to be incredibly robust attached to a well built stern
rail or the boat itself.  And  the mount should be as low as possible as
well to minimize leverage if hit by a wave and designed with a quick
release.  I am sure there are proven designs  out there.

As a general observation...cabin top mounts are constantly  being hit by
waves that your sailing into causing much increased  forces.  While stern
wave boarding forces may/should  be mitigated by your going with the wind...

No perfect solutions out there...you take your shots and have fun.

David F. Risch
1981 40
(401) 419-4650 (cell)



  _____  

Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2015 10:00:56 -0600
To: dziedzi...@hotmail.com; cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Mounting Liferaft on a 41
From: cnc-list@cnc-list.com

That would be mine concern, as well.  The time you'll need the raft is when
the $#!+ has really hit the fan; and at that point, most of your
rail-mounted stuff will have already been washed off the boat.


Fred Street -- Minneapolis
S/V Oceanis (1979 C&C Landfall 38) -- on the hard in Bayfield, WI   :^(

 

On Mar 5, 2015, at 9:33 AM, Marek Dziedzic via CnC-List
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote:

 

I am probably stating the obvious, but from what I have read so far, the
critical thing is how you mount the raft. Many people got the rafts blown
away by waves (water), especially in knock downs. The forces in play are
substantially higher than almost anything we normally imagine.

 

Marek



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