I didn't read the whole thread, but I though it would be appropriate to post my story here. Yes, a TI can flip.
It happened to me the other day and caught me by complete surprise. I was out on the Hackensack River by my home on a 12 MPH gusting to 20 windy day. I was on a flat section, no waves, just me sitting in the rear seat. As I was taking in all the sun and marshes’ green, thinking to myself what a nice way to relax, a strong gust hit the sail from the side and the TI started leaning over rapidly. It was too fast for me to do anything. I didn’t even have time to let the main sheet loose. The TI flipped in probably 1.5 seconds. No pin broke, nothing failed, just strong wing and no weight to counter its force.
I swam right from under the boat in the murky water and floated next to it. What an awful feeling. I got so much gear on my TI, its ridicules, and all was under water. All I saw was yellow hull with a dagger board and the drive fins pointing up. My Suzuki motor (which was off thanks god!), BT speakers, GPS, dry box, cooler, auxiliary 3 gallons fuel tank, spinnaker kit, and much more, all under the murky water.
It was relatively warm and I was wearing 2 piece wetsuit, wet shoes, life vest with submersible radio and a knife. This wasn’t in no way a life threatening situation, but I admit, I freaked out for a moment there fearing to lose the boat. Luckily I watched the ”how to right an Island” video on the forum and I prepared for it in advance. I will tell you that removing the trampoline, the “keep out” lines and all that were in my way of folding one Ama was a pain. I had to float around the boat and figuring all by touch and memory. I attached a line to each Ama’s grab handle and wrapped it in such way I can release a small carabiner and pull the line out in one motion. That came in real handy. No need to fiddle around looking for a line. I climbed up on the hull, pulled on the line from the opposite Ama and leaned back, tilting the TI. My boat is heavy with the motor, fuel, cooler, anchor and more, and I had to summon all my might and 235 lb for the purpose but I managed to right the boat.
As soon as it was up, I furled the sail and opened the Ama. Surprisingly as soon as I got the boat up, the music started playing from by submersible speakers and upon a quick inspection, I realized I lost nothing. Everything was leashed (after paying $150 to replace a lost Hobie pedal, you leash stuff). It took me probably 45 minutes to an hour to bring the boat to its prior condition. The spinnaker I removed turned into a mess of ropes and I was working from the muddy bank. But I did it.
I will tell you it was a great feeling knowing I was put to the test and passed. If it was in high sea, I would have to put a lot more effort into it. I will also speculate if I had an able partner, it would have been a lot easier. My advice is to prepare in advance and be ready. The next thing I am going to look into is moving to the front seat when going out solo. For that I need to MacGyver moving the motor controls to the front, build hakas to seat on while countering the wind forces (tramps are awful since whatever way your in them, you get wet) and get a pole to extend the reach for the rudder handle. Well, winter is coming so I'll have the time I guess.
Last edited by Hezi on Tue Dec 26, 2017 8:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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