http://www.seriousoffshore.com/sacce...arpaint-crash/
24 years ago, Bobby Saccenti tripped and stuffed the Apache cat prototype. We sat with Bobby, watching the video of that crash and the frightening similarity to the Warpaint crash in Key West.
Results 1 to 14 of 14
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11-23-2011 10:51 PM
Last edited by Admin; 11-25-2011 at 10:47 AM.
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11-24-2011 11:10 AM
The last thing Bobby said in your interview
"Bobby: Well, I think they’re less prone to do what happened in my crash. But now they’re running way too fast and the race courses are laid out in a way that winning is too dependent on corner speed."
My thoughts:
Pleasure boats are now seeing speeds in the 170s-190s. Race boats seem compelled to see greater speeds than ever before, and acceleration that we could not comprehend in the 'old days of racing'.
The courses have gotten shorter and shorter. When I first began to watch offshore racing, they would leave the beach in Point Pleasant, NJ, go out across the ocean to Long Island, and back, and a few hours later you were lucky to see a few race boats, finish the event. When I began to race, we ran 4-7 laps (depending on class) on a 20 mile course, with almost 10 mile straight aways. Ten years latter we were running 20-30 laps on a 4 mile course, with almost 2 mile straight aways. Twenty years latter (today), speeds and acceleration have continued to rise, and the 'fast' corner (turning the boat) at extremely high speeds, along with the need to accelerate quickly, and hold the speed until the last possible second, just before the turn, seems to have made something that was already dangerous, ever more dangerous.
I do not know what the answer is, but I do know that we have become all too complacent, around something so potentially deadly. I feel that a professional race crash engineering analysis company, needs to be hired. They need to be given access to the boats involved in the recent wrecks, they need to be given access to any and all available photos and videos of the wrecks, they need to be given the medial histories of those involved leading up to the event, the need to be given the full coroners reports, and they need to be given the safety policies, procedures, implementations.
As a long time boat racer, I welcome an accident investigation as I suggested above.
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11-24-2011 12:25 PM
Amazing how similar the crashes are!
Great article!"Keep the bottle on the bar Ira, I won't be long".
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11-25-2011 04:54 PM
That's the first time I really had a chance to read that, and watch the vid, WOW!
Parabellum FJ²B
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11-26-2011 06:55 PMTrying to work with it.....
Getting bad advice is unfortunate, taking bad advice is a Serious matter!!
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11-26-2011 10:32 PM
Every boat in that stretch of water was a heartbeat away from tripping......it was some nasty water, with the wind blowing out of the East, and the tide ripping through the channel SSW. It was a miniature Hawaii Five 0 tube !!
Parabellum FJ²B
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11-27-2011 11:26 PM
Wow lucky he survived great video!
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11-28-2011 02:04 PM
WOW
Scary sight to see in that vid.
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11-28-2011 06:59 PM
it was a tragic week for sure ,,their should be some way to get control of a racing event,,the course,,,and the safety personal ( 80% are weekend boater volunteers) need to be educated on extraction protocall ,, ps,, v-bottoms stuff also,,
IMCO #10- 2009 National Champions
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11-30-2011 10:34 PMmade for some rockin and rollin that's for sure.!! too bad we didnt have a 30ft Tuna tower for paul to shoot from!!!
Some where in Kenya a village is missing an Idiot!
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