C-Dory Hull Shape(s)? 22 Cruiser

Yosef

1988 22 Cruiser "Heron" Eastern Washington (state)
Joined
Apr 26, 2022
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Location
Eastern Washington (state)
C Dory Year
1988
C Dory Model
22 Cruiser
Hull Identification Number
DOR22355E888
Vessel Name
Heron
Crawled under an '88 22' Cruiser and the "V" is held all the way to the transom.

Somehow, I got the idea that C-Dory hulls were V's from the for end to maybe 2/3 the way back where it makes a flat area starting on the V and flattening & widening to maybe 2.5' wide at the transom.

Are all C-Dory hulls V's from stem to stern?

-Yosef
 
I believe the original models were completely flat starting well forward of the transom. Newer C-Dory's have a very slight (couple of degrees) deadrise at the stern.

Are you sure you were looking at a C-Dory? How much of a "V" did you see? Pictures would help.

I'm sure others with more precise historical knowledge will chime in.
 
To my knowledge all of the C Dory 22 were flat iron dory until 1987, Then the hulls are like they are today. There is a variable dead rise ending at the transom as noted above at about 2 to 4*.

The Cape Cruiser/Ventures have a bit more dead rise aft.

There were some of the 26/27 hulls which had a deep V all of the way aft--and it may be one of these early 26/27 boats you had seen.
 
To my knowledge all of the C Dory 22 were flat iron dory until 1987, Then the hulls are like they are today. There is a variable dead rise ending at the transom as noted above at about 2 to 4*.

The Cape Cruiser/Ventures have a bit more dead rise aft.

There were some of the 26/27 hulls which had a deep V all of the way aft--and it may be one of these early 26/27 boats you had seen.
 
thataway":z03mtk6u said:
There were some of the 26/27 hulls which had a deep V all of the way aft--and it may be one of these early 26/27 boats you had seen.

If you visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCIjkHzEEgU and fast forward to 18:16 it shows the "flat area" at the transom.

The 1988 22' cruiser I'm looking at has a "v" hull shape at the transom. My understanding of such a hull shape (V all the way) is that it will (vs hull with flat area):

1. Roll more,

2. Lean over when it's beached,

3. Use more fuel when on plane.

Are there any pluses to the hull shape I'm seeing on this '88?

-Yosef
 
The U tube video you link to shows the almost flat transom dead rise--and is what the post 1987 boats all have.

The advantage of the deep 'v ((24 to our last 26* dead rise is that they cut into chop much better without pounding.

They are less stable at rest, use more fuel, roll a little more.
 
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