




What made the Sea Nymph 14'6 good was the deep vee and gull wings.
I bought an Allicraft 16 foot in 1991 that had the same sort of hull, but was too light with a 2mm hull.
The best hull for the rough was the ultra heavy Morgan 6.3 metre, very deep vee and big gull wings, when the Morgan landed the waves got out of the way, but at 2 nm per gallon you needed deep pockets. (200 2 stroke Merc)
The best boat for a rough sea is a big heavy boat.
Any small runabout and you should be familiar with weather forcasts for your area and the old rule of "wind with tide". If the wind and the tide are going the same way then the sea will be easier to handle than if the wind and tide are opposing.
Was at a charter friend's place tonight and he says his old 6m McLay Fisherman hardtop with 150hp Johnson outboard (a boat I would die for!!!) was crap in the rough sea compared to his 8m SeaRanger (8mm plate alloy) with 200hp 2 stroke e-tec. In his opinion none of the "small" tinnies are any good in rough weather. He particularly disliked the boats that I liked (McLay, Surtees, etc). I asked which small boat he would recommend and he said "none of them" LOL. He said the tinnies were too light and handled like crap in rough sea.


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