Saturday I had a really great day sailing my 14 (no jib). The lake is at 8600 feet and was blowing from just under white caps to some pretty filled in caps and swell.
Early in the day, I was messing with the adjustable downhaul going slow and a big gust hit and the boat went over. This is the frist time Ive gone over in probably 20 sailing sesions. If I hadnt been "sleeping", I probably could have sailed the gust - but I went on over. I weigh just under 200 lbs and have a bob at the end of the mast and was standing on one hull and could steer the boat and tried to angle the sail into the wind in a few different ways but I just could not get the boat to come over and ended up drifting into shore where I then fixed things.
http://www.hobiecat.com/support/tech/righting.html From reading this, it looks like I had two things wrong. First, I didnt uncleat the main sheet once the boat was over on its side. Second is that the previous owner had a righting line on the boat that was tied to the stays from the underside of the platform. So when I tried to use the righting line, the rope came from inside the hull and it just didnt give very good leverage. What I gather from the web site is that the righting line should go from the frame stay attachment and then on the outside of the hull so that you get the max leverage for pulling the boat over. But.. this means that I would manually have to put the rope over the top of the hull and then attach it to the frame/stay point. - when in the tipped position. Is this correct?
Once I got the boat over and changed the righting line somewhat, I went back out sailing (I was wearing a dry suit so didnt get cold) and had just one heck of an intense sailing day just hauling ass! I almost flipped again on a screaming reach from my lee hull submarining on a big chunk of chop but thankfully I recovered from that one.