The hull 
    This boat is intended as a lightweight pocket cruiser with easily driven lines and a traditionally inspired sailplan. The
    epoxy lapstrake hull is based on a proven US type. 
    The design is a deliberately lightweight and small interpretation of the
    competition's aims to ensure that the boat can be rowed and trailored on land by two
    people relatively easily. A small outboard (not shown) may also be used. 
     
    An important innovation is the addition of twin daggerboards designed to provide both
    upwind performance and support when the boat is grounded - streamlined blocks are attached
    part way up the length of the twin daggerboards to act as 'legs' when bottomed out. This
    feature is particularly important in the UK, as our small boat cruising enthusiasts tend
    to prefer to sleep on board up a creek in preference to using tents at the water's margin.
    This may seem a curious habit given the tides seen in the British Isles, but may be due to
    the traditional hostility of the British landowner. 
     
    I envisage a T-section rudder to allow a short rudder to be used that will not require to
    be withdrawn when beaching. The long skeg is intended to provide a degree of directional
    stability and my general arrangement includes a pinrail that I hope will allow the skipper
    of this boat to make a cup of tea from time to time.  
     
    In my view, this boat's main drawbacks are: 
     
    that it is a relatively complex building job, 
    that it is best sailed flat, and 
    that the accommodation has been kept to a minimum in favour of an easily driven hull. 
    The sailplan 
    The yawl that's nearly a schooner, the schooner that's nearly a yawl, and the
    periauger with two similar sails have been popular small boat rigs in many places for a
    very, very long time, even if they are rarely seen now. I was recently reminded of this
    when I began to research a British inshore working boat, the Humber gold-duster, and again
    when considering the Hampton boat and the Kingston lobster boat as described by Howard
    Chappelle and John Gardner. Each of the three types were seen sporting twin spritsails of
    similar size (though not always in the latter two cases), and each were smart sailers.  
     
    In particular, the Duster evolved for the purposes of racing to meet ships coming in to
    the Humber estuary in order to sell boatsman's services, which I feel must be some sort of
    recommendation. Spritsails also have a reputation for dumping wind during gusts, which
    must be an important consideration when using a lightweight boat such as this for coastal
    cruising. 
     
    So why not bring the twin spritsail configuration back into use?  
     
    Finally, I should say that I think anyone who built this boat and wished to rig it very
    cheaply might find that using two second-hand Laser rigs will serve, at least on a
    temporary basis. 
    The accommodation 
    In line with the confining lines of the hull and the need to keep windage to a
    minimum, the enclosed sleeping area has been made as small as possible. However, I
    envisage a tent slung over the boom with the purpose of creating a sheltered cooking and
    living area when at anchor, or when beached. Storage areas are available under the cockpit
    seating.  
    Safety and seaworthiness 
    Most boats this shoal are really just large dinghies, and this is no exception.
    It cannot normally be made self-righting, despite the ballast in its keel and the natural
    buoyancy of the wooden masts, and so I feel it is important to keep the emergency buoyancy
    at the ends - the cabin and under the after-deck - with the cockpit relatively open in
    order to give the crew a chance of righting the boat in a capsize. (I have too many times
    struggled to right a boat that floats too high out of the water on its side.) The storage
    under the cockpit seating is therefore enclosed only by a 'basketwork' of slats. 
     
    Using scantlings based on 6mm ply for the hull and 5mm ply for decks, doghouse etc., I
    estimate that the combined weight of the hull and gear is 490lbs. Allowing for 650lbs of
    crew in the cockpit, and 72.5lbs of gear in the each of the cabin and cockpit storage
    areas places the centre of gravity at just 10ft aft of the stem.  
     
    By a happy coincidence, at a displacement of 1350lbs, the centre of bounce is likewise
    10ft from the stem. 
     
    I therefore suggest that any additional ballast should be placed so that it is centred at
    this same point. On the principle that ballast should be distributed over a reasonable
    distance fore and aft, I would suggest a 220lb iron shoe 12ft in length, 3in wide and 2in
    deep be attached to the keel with its centre at ten feet from the bows. I suggest that
    sandbags may be used to provide trimming ballast as needed.  |