Articles

Proas through the ages

 Boatbuilding  History  Proas

My buddy Lee picked up this ancient artifact for me recently: How to Build 20 BOATS, a Fawcett 50 cent publication from 1943. It’s reprinted material from Mechanix Illustrated, and it happens to include the PLYWOOD PROA by Hi Sibley. Aside from the historical value (nearly equivalent to King Tut’s Tomb) I find it interesting that:

1. In all the years since then, plywood is still the preferred construction material for amateur boat…

04 January 2009     0 comments.

First Flight

 News  New Designs  Hydrofoils  Rigs  Research

A working hapa model has finally been accomplished by Frenchman Luc Armant. It is the realization of the theoretically perfect sailboat: an airfoil and hydrofoil, tied together by a single line in tension. The massless sailboat has long been the dream of sailing pioneers from Bernard Smith’s aerohydrofoil to D. Costes’ chien de mer (seadog) to the hapas of J. Hagedoorn. The achievement cannot really be overstated, IMHO. Well done, Mr.…

Massless Clipper

21 September 2008     0 comments.

Sealand

 History

I’ve just read Sealand, over at Creed O’Hanlon’s blog: Tiki in Thailand, and I highly recommend it. It’s a great article - exploring the utopian ideal called “Seasteading” . Seasteading is the creation of autonomous floating villages on the sea, either legal or piratical, depending on the political leanings of the villagers. Seasteading is the natural reaction to civilization, as was homesteading 200 years ago.

Human civilization, no…

06 September 2008     0 comments.

Changeup camp cruiser catamaran

 New Designs  Catamarans

The slider is the best pitch in baseball.—Ted Williams

Changeup is a riff on Ray Aldridge’s brilliant beach cruising cat, Slider. I hesitated to publish these drawings at first, since they are an obvious take-off on Ray’s design, but imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, so I hope Ray takes them in the spirit intended, which is one of respectful admiration.

Slider answers almost every single desire of my beach cruiser…

Changeup

05 September 2008     0 comments.

Equilibre

 Boatbuilding  Proas

A French West Indies Proa

Jeremy Fischer designed, built and sails his 40’ proa Equilibre out of Martinique. Everything about this boat is virtually perfect: the strong Micronesian heritage, the huge crab claw sail, the time and cost sensitive construction/fit-out, even the color (probably the result of the can being on clearance at the local chandlery). Equilibre helps me think about balance, not only with wind and tide, but with the…

Equilibre

04 September 2008     1 comments.

The proas of J. S. Taylor

 New Designs  Designers  History  Proas

The proa designs of Australian designer J. S. Taylor have been the subject of many an interesting discussion on the proa_file list over the years. Taylor, an East European immigrant to Oz in the 50’s, had several of his provocative articles published in the yachting press of the day, both locally and internationally. Taylor was one of the first to advocate the proa as a serious yachting alternative, and his imperious tone combined with…

30 August 2008     1 comments.

The Spinnaclaw

 New Designs  Rigs

The boys in the lab have been working overtime on a new invention, and I wanted to give you a sneak peak. Internally we call it the spinnaclaw, however marketing is still testing the final brand name with focus groups.

As the name implies, it is a cross between a crab claw sail and a spinnaker, sort of a Scandinavian/Polynesian hybrid. The idea is to mount the crab claw boom to a spinnaker pole, and shunt the sail like a big…

Spinnaclaw rig

23 August 2008     0 comments.

Slider

 Just Launched  Catamarans

The Sixteen Foot Beach Cruiser Catamaran

Multihull beach cruisers are something I spend a little too much of my time thinking about, and it’s nice to discover kindred spirits. Ray Aldridge of Florida has progressed considerably beyond the thinking stage and built one of the sweetest little beach cruisers I’ve ever seen. Slider is well named, squeezing between the fantasy island of sailing nirvana and the rocks of economic/bureaucratic…

Slider catamaran

28 June 2008     0 comments.

The relaunch of CHEERS

 Just Launched  Designers  History  Proas

The French love all things historical and nautical, so it makes perfect sense that they have become the curators of the first Atlantic proa in the world: the “giant killer” CHEERS. Today, he is kept in Port Saint Louis by Vincent Besin and the French government, which has declared him a “monument historique”, one of less than 100 small craft, and the only multihull. CHEERS was relaunched last week, at a ceremony that included his…

CHEERS

14 June 2008     0 comments.

Bamboo Boatbuilding

 Boatbuilding  Research

Bamboo is a material with excellent engineering qualities that has so far been useful to boatbuilders mainly as a source for spars. In this article, Richard Emmet proposes processing bamboo for marine plywood.

I held a sample of interior grade bamboo ply in my hand and it took less than two seconds to decide that I could build boats out of this stuff. I could not believe how light it was! And it felt about as stiff as steel. Of course…

30 May 2008     0 comments.