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How dangerous is it to overload a Hobie 3.5?  Bottom

  • I just found out that my Hobie 3.5 is meant for sub 170 lb riders and I am about 250. It drafted deep(about to the top deck) but it didn't take on any water and sailed ok.

    Am I risking messing something up on it to sail it? I got it for cheap and didn't know anything about it nor did the person selling it. only thing i had to replace was the rope, make up some rudder hardware and patch a sail tear.

    you can get a few pics of my maiden voyage at www.runningbeforethewind.com

    oh and i found your site by the recomendation while probing for information over at sailnet.com



    edited by: gemiller, Jul 18, 2009 - 06:33 AM
  • not really dangerous, just real slow and not much fun, might tip it over a lot but you should be able to pull it up easily

    get used to sailing it, and if you like it get something bigger

    try to sail a hobie 16 with someone
  • Quotenot really dangerous, just real slow and not much fun


    like erice says, you will learn to sail on this and will very quickly want to move up to something a little more exciting.

    --
    TurboHobo
    H14T
    H16
    P18
    G-Cat 5.0
    P16
    --
  • gemiller,

    Welcome to the site and I'm glad you are getting into sailing, and thanks for the link on your blog.

    But I got to say... the first thing that came to mind when I looked at your maiden voyage pictures was a quote from Jaws.

    "We're gonna need a bigger boat." icon_lol

    The Hobie 3.5 was the very smallest catamaran Hobie ever built and you (and I) are not the smallest sailors.

    The good news is you have a complete and desirable boat that someone would buy for their child so you can move up to at least a Hobie 16 and better a Hobie 18 or Nacra equivalent.

    Clean the sails with some OxiClean or a mild mixture of Barkeepers friend.

    The important thing, Keep Sailing!

    --
    Damon Linkous
    1992 Hobie 18
    Memphis, TN

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  • Thanks for the comments everyone, lol I agree on the jaws quote damon!

    It's a fun toy considering I with all the rope and repairs I did still got the whole thing for $150ish.

    What I will probably do is just keep sailing on it this year and do a full resto on it this winter and keep it around and look for another bigger craft. Rumor has it there is someone around here that has a hobie 14 thats sorta new in good condit that desperately needs to get rid of it... maybe I'll just start my own personal regatta :)

    as long as i'm not going to risk any damage i'll entertain myself with it :) like after getting the message on my phone that it won't break anything we, with much entertainment, stacked three people on it and sailed it half submerged for a few minutes to see what would happen. suprisingly with the right gust of wind we got it to come back up :) lol, wish I would have got pics it was funny watching three full size adults try to balace this thing while the legs were submerged a few inches! but it still took on no water!

    Thanks so much for the replies and I'll definately be around a good bit here checking out all the awesome information and people :)
  • good idea to sail the hell out of it this summer

    as for next year, at 250lbs don't even bother with the hobie14 unless it's a turbo with jib and dolphin striker

    you are way heavier than my 165lbs and i hold down a 17foot nacra with 19m2 of sail area

    as mentioned earlier you have the mass to make a hobie 16 or even 18 behave once you've gotten hold of the basics

    and they are both a lot more fun to take 3 people out on

    but hammer that 3.5 while you have it

    kind of the 50cc scooter before you go the whole hog

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