Hi Andrew, 
I use the following method to measure draft in the boatyard. I use a tape 
measure or folding rule and a laser level. 
I use the watermark waterline on the boat's bottom paint. I set a 2 x 4 against 
the side of the boat. Then use a laser level or a string level, to bring the 
bottom of the keel out to mark the board, and the waterline to mark the board, 
and you measure the difference to get the real draft. 

I found many of the designer stats were bogus. I measured three 4' 10" draft 
boats that actually draw 5' 3" or more. A 5" difference would suggest 5000# of 
gear aboard. More likely the stats posted were scewed to sell more boats. 


Chuck 
Resolute 
1990 C&C 34R 
Broad Creek, Magothy River, Md 

----- Original Message -----

From: "andrew rothweiler via CnC-List" <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> 
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com 
Cc: "andrew rothweiler" <andy...@att.net> 
Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2015 6:49:07 PM 
Subject: Stus-List 30-1 keel depth 

Thank you to all for the great responses. I went back to Sailboatdata and there 
it was, the very last line at the bottom of the page, shoal keel 4 ft 2. The 
owner says he thinks it's the deep keel, but doesn't think it's as deep as 5 
ft. Not sure where 4 ft 7 comes from. 

What is the proper way to measure keel depth? Is it waterline to bottom of 
keel? 

Thanks again. 

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