Regarding stability, we don't have a stability problem here. As far as somebody coming down.... Again these are the rules coming from Lloyds of London. They put five or six 45-gallon drums of water up on your boat and one man stands and pulls on your spar with the rope. To this day, 30 years later, I still don't understand how that represents whether your boat will roll over if you fall into a 20-foot hole that's empty. I guess they make two pulls on it and send you a bill for $12,000.
I know, because every boat I have has a stability booklet, the 42-footer and the 45-footer. It was $12,000 to $15,000, and that's what they do. They put four or five barrels of water up on the house, pull on it with a rope, and count how many seconds it takes for it to come back. I guess that justifies whether you're going to sink or survive.
To conclude, I would still like to address the 44' 11" issue. I know that you've tried as best you could to make it happen. I know we have a lot of opposition and people who don't really care about the tanks. But we have two boats out there that I feel are being unjustly cut short of going lobster fishing. Now there are 1,000 boats, with at least 500 or more of them exceeding 44' 11" in some form.