Tampilkan postingan dengan label dinghy. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label dinghy. Tampilkan semua postingan

Boat Plans And Kits | Tricorn A very early all GRP cruising dinghy

| 0 komentar |

Boat Plans And Kits


The Tricorn dinghy was designed by Illingworth and Primrose in 1962. Since theirs was one of the most famous names in offshore racing yacht design at the time, she came with some impressive pedigree. The design brief appears to have been to create a low maintenance dinghy, capable of serious open water passage-making, that would be better and faster than Ian Proctors well proven and famous Wayfarer class.

Back then in the early 60s there were very few dinghies purpose-designed for construction in GRP. Almost certainly this was the first boat of any type designed by Illingworth and Primrose for this type of construction, and at the time the Wayfarer would only have been available in plywood, so although Angus Primrose had certainly designed dinghies before, the Tricorn brief must have come as a considerable new challenge. His approach, in common with most other designers who were learning to work with this little known material, was make the boat strong and not to spare on materials. When you examine the layup of a Tricorn, youll notice a predominance of woven rovings throughout, and lots of reinforcement in areas where a contemporary wooden or plywood dinghy might have had a tendency to develop stress cracks or other weakness.

Very unusually for such an early fibreglass boat, there is almost no wood, except for the tiller, rudder, and some backing pads for deck fittings. This may have been a bit too avant-garde for the times, since boat enthusiasts in those days would have expected quite a lot of visible wood trim, coamings, decks, floorboards, benches, hatches, etc. The all plastic Tricorn might have been regarded as just too space-age and factory produced, and this perception, as well as its price and the narrowness of its marketing concept, may have seriously limited sales. Eventually only 37 were built.

Not that there was anything wrong with the performance of the Tricorn, nor its ability to shelter its crew of 2 adults, plus maybe a child, for overnight camping stops. Contemporary boat tests make it clear that Tricorn had the edge over the Wayfarer in both departments, although nowadays, after 50 years of Wayfarer class development, the Tricorn would probably struggle to keep up on some points.

Almost certainly, however, Tricorn would still show a Wayfarer a clean pair of heels to windward, since with her centreplate fully down she draws 1.6m (5ft 3in) to the Wayfarers 1.17m (3ft 10in). She is also a few inches longer overall and carries around 1sqm more windward sail. Compared to the Wayfarer, Tricorn is noticeably less stable at rest, though she stiffens up when under way.

Tricorns domed foredeck and short cabin roof enclose a cuddy with sitting space for 4 adults or sleeping space for 2 (in quarter berths extending under the cockpit side benches). There would be just enough space left over in camping mode for a child of up to about 11 years old to stretch out. Theres a large watertight locker aft, and two capacious cockpit side lockers, probably not really totally watertight in the event of capsize, but which resist rain, spray, and even a fair amount of solid water landing in the cockpit.

4 years or so ago, I found and bought an old Tricorn. It was very scruffy, had a hole in the bottom, and lacked its original moulded forehatch cover as well as the original winch for lifting the centreplate. This 1963 example had at some time been used as a sailing school boat and was fitted with a horrible non-original rusty steel plate, weighing in at 50kg or more, double the original design spec. In addition, the mainsail had been reduced in area by cutting the foot off it to a depth of about 1m. These modifications must have made her extremely slow and dull to sail.

Salvo is now back in sailing order with a few minor changes to her original specification. I changed the overweight rusty centreplate to one that weighs about 20kg, about the same as the original design, but mine is home-made from a sandwich of steel, epoxy and plywood. I had to give up on finding an original plate lifting winch and fitted a simple tackle instead. I made a forehatch cover from plywood and clear polycarbonate, and lastly, I changed from a transom mainsheet track to centre sheeting for no better reason than I was scared the sheet might foul on my outboard motor and cause a capsize. The old roller reefing boom was replaced by one from a Fireball, to which I fixed some fittings for slab reefing.

I made a new rudder blade cut from the plywood centreboard from an old Miracle dinghy, but it snapped in half in a fearsome tiderace in Brittany, so I have gone back to the original which I might repropuce in aluminium plate.

There are still a lot of niggling problems to sort out. For instance the original self bailers let more water in to the watertight cockpit than they remove, so my feet are always wet. The in-mast jib halyard emerges from the mast foot in such a way that it is difficult to tension properly. Im considering making it external from a point just below the spreaders so that I can swig it up tight. Most importantly, because of the total lack of rowlocks, a rowing thwart, and a stowage space long enough for decent oars, its impossible to row the boat in the event of flat calm and engine failure. Emergency propulsion consists of a long paddle at the moment.

In spite of the age of the design, and these minor shortcomings, I like my Tricorn.  She is a fine, strong, and capable boat - with one hell of a pedigree!  

Tricorn Sailing Dinghy
Designed by Illingworth and Primrose, 1962
Built by Martin Goacher Ltd.

LOA:  16ft 6in (5m03)
LWL:  15ft (4m57)
Beam:  6ft 2in (1m87)
Draft:  9in (0m22) plate up, 5ft 3in (1m60) plate lowered.
Air draft:  24ft 6in (7m46)
Sail area:  139 sq ft (12.91sqm)
Weight in sailing trim: approx. 580lbs (263Kg)

Link: http://bursledonblog.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/tricorn-dinghy.html


Do you find information about Boat Plans And Kits are you looking for? If not, below may help you find more information about the Boat Plans And Kits. Thank you for visiting, have a great day.
Read More..

Boden Boat Plans Australia | Foxer Dinghy

| 0 komentar |

Boden Boat Plans Australia


Members of the Hamble River Sailing Club Foxer Fleet can be seen sailing every weekend, out on the water all year around summer and winter alike.



Designed by David Thomas (who also designed the Sigma 33) as a versatile sailing dinghy and yacht tender, the Foxer attracts some very experience helms and the fleet is characterised by close and competitive racing.

Length: 3.25m (10 8")
Sail Area (Mono): 6.3m² (68 sq ft)
Beam: 1.37m (4 6")
Weight: 78 kg (172 lbs)



The FOXER is a boat you sail IN rather than on. The exceptional stability and simple to control rig means there is no need to perch on the sides or hang overboard when sailing to windward - helms aged 8 to 80 with any degree of physical fitness can sail within their limits, while enjoying outstanding sailing qualities and safety.

The distinctive red, black and white Foxer sails have become and integral part of the Hamble weekend waterfront.

Do you find information about Boden Boat Plans Australia are you looking for? If not, below may help you find more information about the Boden Boat Plans Australia. Thank you for visiting, have a great day.
Read More..

Pontoon Boat Plans | Sonnet Sailing Dinghy

| 0 komentar |

Pontoon Boat Plans


I have been motivated to do a review on the Sonnet for a number of reasons - (1) a new CNC kit is about to be launched (CKD Boats) (2) the Sonnet Sailing Association has a whole new breath of life and energy (3) Sonnets (along with Dabchicks and Tempos), are the brainchildren of a great dinghy designer, the late Jack Koper, an ex-Capetonian, and (4) I have personally built and owned two Dabchicks and one Sonnet (S269 - which I still own). Very close to home then!

It was these boats, built in 1965-73, that got me hooked on Sailing and Boating, and for which I owe my Dad a whole bunch - we learned carpentry and sailing at the same time back in those years. Dabchicks probably account for more accomplished sailors in SA than any other class to date I reckon!

Right-click for full-size - the current Sonnet Sailing Poster

?The Sonnet was designed in the early 70s - about 1971 as I recall. Jack designed the Dabchick first, the Tempo second, and the Sonnet 3rd as an in-between. Along wth the Dabby, it has become the most enduring design - and its a great credit to these designs that they live on after so many popoluar dinghies of that day have faded away. Sadly, the huge dinghy fleets of the 60s and 70s of Sharpies, Finns, Fireballs, Flying Dutchmen, Enterprises, Spearheads, Sprogs the odd Flying Fifteen etc - all gave way to Hobies, Lasers, Oppies, 09ers etc. Of the old-timers, Sonnets, Dabbies and Extras appear to survived best, and certainly in the Cape the Sonnet remains a very popular and active class. Its not an Olympic Class, but a great local class to put your hat in!

What makes the Sonnet so popular?
As a scow dinghy, it is flat, wide, stable and planes very easily. The beam makes it easy to get the ballast out wide, and the boat is easy to control and very forgiving. Ideal for strong wind, when dinghy sailing is most fun. Further, they are easy to handle (simple rig) - ideal trainers, but also very rewarding to experienced sailors in strong wind. A Sonnet in 25 knots on a broad reach is a truly unbeatable experience. I cant tell you the speed (before GPS) - but I can tell you the water jet that sprayed up through the centreboard casing flew clean over the transom, and only a small piece of boat would touch the water. Whilst many other dinghies compete well with them in lesser winds, the ultimate sense of speed belongs to the Sonnet! Well, to be fair - credit also to the Dabby (if you are small), the Tempo and Fireball (if you are a pro, and have a pro-crew as well). The Sonnet however, is the most acessible - easiest to build and own, and is also a great boat for single-handing. If you really want to learn to sail, learn to sail a monohull dinghy first. Its also the best way to learn single-handing - and the Sonnet would be the recommened boat every time, if you ask me.

Historically, most Sonnets were homebuilt - from Jack Kopers detailed plans (hand drawn) - using marine ply, meranti, and decent glue. It was inexpensive, not too difficult, but quite time consuming. No problem with this - but these days many people dont have the time or space to build there own boats from scratch - though I can vouch this is as rewarding as the sailing itself. In more recent times, Steven du Toit in Zeekoevlei has built a good few dozen Sonnets (very) professionally, and word now is that he is busy with a GRP version. However - professionally built boats are not exactly cheap! Dont ask me today - but I have seen pro-dinghies from R30-50k and some people say more . . . 

Do Sonnets have any drawbacks?
They dont point as well as pointy-boats in light winds. That said, they arent bad, and still cover the course faster than many equivalents. Plus, pointing high in light winds hardly compares with the adrenalin of a planing broad-reach! They arent Olympic classes, they also arent high-tech - but they are inexpensive, ideal club boats, and very rewarding.

Competition for Sonnets?
In South Africa, Sonnets Rule! At least in this class. Internationally, and for those seeking a modern high-performance kit boat, see also Dudley Dixs Paper Jet 14. See http://www.ckboats.com/, and http://www.dixdesign.com/.

Vital Statistics
  • Length Overall 4375 mm (about 143")
  • Beam 1525 mm (5)
  • Dry Weight of Hull only not < 75 Kgs
  • Mast length not > 5600 mm
Credits to the Sonnet Sailing Association for photos. For more info please see www.sonnetsailing.co.za.


My own Sonnet before FBYC longhaul earlier in 2010


Video Clip of this Sonnet sailing at Langebaan Lagoon, South Africa, in 2003



Do you find information about Pontoon Boat Plans are you looking for? If not, below may help you find more information about the Pontoon Boat Plans. Thank you for visiting, have a great day.
Read More..