tarquin1 said..Troubadour,Please do name the brand so people know.
Chris 249, maybe there is one before 85? This was after the Cheeki Rafiki incident.
Fair call, there was one boat in 1984; the next one was Drum (1985) and then there was two more in the '80s.
The list doesn't include Planet X, a Goddard half tonner that lost its keel in 1989 (IIRC) off the Gold Coast after what was alleged to be a weld failure on the MME elliptical keel.
The 1984 one I didn't know about and it may not have been in earlier reports. It was a Castro Jeanneau Sunfast in the Figaro which must have been one of the very limited-edition Sunfast half tonners like Balthazar (IIRC) which had a high aspect keel with no bulb and was not an elliptical. The cause of keel loss is unknown so there is no reason to assume it was keel bolt failure. The Sunfast 30 was a leading-edge stripped out IOR machine with the emphasis on light wind performance.
After 1990, when keels changed, the toll becomes stupidly high IMHO. But the physics of a bulbed high-aspect short-root narrow-section keel are very different to those of the standard pre '85 keel, and the latter just do not come off.
I'm morbidly interested in the danger of sailing since my father was killed sailing when I was three. My collection of sailing magazines dates back to 1893 (yes, 1893 not 1983) and they do not include reports of keels falling off until that 1984 Sunfast one.
As an actual risk, it's vanishingly small.