I'm a trawler newbie, but experienced offshore sailor with over 1,000 nights at anchor. When I bought my first trawler, a North Pacific 36, I experienced the new-to-me Chinese water torture of water slapping against the hull while sleeping in the V-berth. I tried putting a bunch of bedding under the V-berth, I made a "necklace" of pool noodles to be a mini breakwater, and finally talked to the owner of North Pacific Yachts. He said one person tried a new sound-deadening paint (ineffective), and another had a yard fiberglass over the chine where it cuts the water, potentially eliminating the sound (results unknown). Our anchorages here in the Puget Sound are very protected, but you wouldn't know it from the sound in even a soft breeze and minor fetch.
Was this unique to our boat, or do other boats have the same problem with the water slapping against the chines while at anchor? We are looking to buy something in the 38-42' range, and limiting our search to hulls without chines cuts into an already small list of potential boats.
Was this unique to our boat, or do other boats have the same problem with the water slapping against the chines while at anchor? We are looking to buy something in the 38-42' range, and limiting our search to hulls without chines cuts into an already small list of potential boats.