Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/08/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Richard, Lovely pictures of a classic sailboat. Excellent old designs seem to hang on forever. The S-Class and the Star sailboats are good examples. So too is the Leica camera, Barnack or M. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/rtaylor/PICKS/2010_boating/300_8374.jpg.html The S-Class sailboats were designed by Nathanial Herreshoff in 1919. Herreshoff was the dean of American boat naval architects and designed and built 5 America's Cup winners. The S-Class boat is a classic "old fashioned" racing sailboat characteristic of the early 1900s. It shares the same relationship to modern racing boats as the Leica does to modern cameras. Fast sailboats of that era were slim and had a relatively deep draft. They were often referred to as "plank on edge" style boats. The S-Class boat is smaller than it looks from Richard's pictures. It is 27.5 feet long with a beam of a bit more than 7 feet. If you had long arms, you could reach from side to side. The mast curvature is not accident. It helps the sail hold its shape better and increases sail efficiency. The last boat was built in 1941 but the class proved so popular that 95% of the boats built are still sailing. Here are the specs of the S-Class boats: http://sailboatdata.com/VIEWRECORD.ASP?CLASS_ID=73 The S-Class was inspired by the Skerry Cruiser, another fast sailboat of that era dating from 1907. http://www.squareskerryyachts.net/30m/index.html The Skerry Cruiser is a Swedish design incorporating every known trick for making speed under sail. The Skerry Cruisers are absolutely beautiful boats but they are so difficult to maintain that few are in use today. Hereshoff was determined to develop a similar boat which could be raced and maintained by ordinary club sailors. Judging by the popularity of the S-Class boats, he succeeded. Just for the record, modern club racing sailboats tend to have flat broad hulls and fin keels, rather than narrow hulls and deep full keels. They tend to be scaled up dinghies rather than smaller America's Cup racing boats. There are two S-Class boats and one Skerry Cruiser in my sailing area. A 14 foot Force Five, a Hobie Cat, or a Laser could easily beat them in a race but that's sort of like saying that a hopped up motorcycle could outspeed a classic Rolls Royce. Larry Z