My 26 X had a 26 gallon water bladder under the V berth. Some of the foam was still in there too. The foam, sort of, held the bladder in place. I never noticed it sloshing around.
The boat sailed noticeable better with the water bladder full. I didn't notice any handling issues, when powering at full speed when the bladder was full and ballast was empty. I lost a touch of top speed, likely just due to the 230 or so pounds of extra weight.
The 26X, particularly the early ones (mine was a 1997) were pretty heavy in the rear, because the ballast tank went all the way to the transom. Later Xs tanks stopped short of the transom and there was a tunnel from the tank to the ballast valve. So adding weight up front, by water tanks and moving batteries forward seemed to help sailing performance, at least in the very early Xs. It helped get some of that big square transom out of the water and reduce some of the turbulence.
On to the D boat.........
This is really not a good comparison where sailing performance goes, compared to the power sailors,(the D is a rocket by comparison
I never stripped either of my Macs of all their foam floatation, but I have removed some at times to fit other things. I figure even with no floatation these boats would be closer to neutrally buoyant than boats that have #500 iron swing keels, like my Catalina 22 did. Who knows..... best to keep the PDFs handy in any case.
Someone told me that all those guys standing on the pictured, swamped boat in the add photo were about 5'3" and about 130lbs. soaking wet. Don't know if it's true, but it was a credible source.
I also can tell you that the less overall weight you have in any of these boats, the faster they are. However, I prefer to have mine stocked with plenty of beer, steaks and fresh water. And heck, just my toolbox/spare parts box must weigh 60lbs or so. and three batteries are way better than two
Best Breezes,
Steve K.
