The M20 is 2.9 meters wide and the first 6 boats to finish on 2009 Texel was M20 with sloop rigs. The team that came first had an extra wide M20, I think it was 3.6 meters wide. Marstrom is now building new wide beams for some M20 in Holland....
Some M20 boats tested the newly developed "banana" boards from Marstrom. It's hard to tell if you gain much with them but it sure lifts the boat!
/hakan
-- Have You Seen This? --
Re: Beaver 20HT
[Re: Matt M]
#182744 06/23/0903:40 PM06/23/0903:40 PM
Why doesn't Nacra just start building a new 20-footer? All they have to do is get a new design, make a mold, decide on a new rig, keep as many parts as posibble and start building. How hard could it be?
The M20 is 2.9 meters wide and the first 6 boats to finish on 2009 Texel was M20 with sloop rigs. The team that came first had an extra wide M20, I think it was 3.6 meters wide. Marstrom is now building new wide beams for some M20 in Holland....
Some M20 boats tested the newly developed "banana" boards from Marstrom. It's hard to tell if you gain much with them but it sure lifts the boat!
/hakan
IMHO another advantage of the banana-boards is that they can get more surface without adding more draught, something which could be very important for Texel which has lots of shoals etc.
Here some pics I took of the boards.
Re: Beaver 20HT
[Re: Matt M]
#182750 06/23/0903:50 PM06/23/0903:50 PM
Why doesn't Nacra just start building a new 20-footer?
I'll quote Jack on this one; "Why do we need to beat ourselves?" They did it once to the 6.0 with the I20. Another one with a raised rear beam would be cool. I guess the designer of the Beaver never responded to the SCHRS question? Where did he go? I would like to buy one so I could say I rode the Beaver hard this weekend and not get in trouble.
Lee
Keyboard sailors are always faster in all conditions.
Why doesn't Nacra just start building a new 20-footer?
I'll quote Jack on this one; "Why do we need to beat ourselves?" They did it once to the 6.0 with the I20. Another one with a raised rear beam would be cool. I guess the designer of the Beaver never responded to the SCHRS question? Where did he go? I would like to buy one so I could say I rode the Beaver hard this weekend and not get in trouble.
We could probably fill a whole thread with these jokes Btw, according to their website the target SCHRS is 0,915
The M20 is 2.9 meters wide and the first 6 boats to finish on 2009 Texel was M20 with sloop rigs. The team that came first had an extra wide M20, I think it was 3.6 meters wide. Marstrom is now building new wide beams for some M20 in Holland....
Some M20 boats tested the newly developed "banana" boards from Marstrom. It's hard to tell if you gain much with them but it sure lifts the boat!
/hakan
The extra Wide M20 (M20 Vampire to give it the full name) is William Sunnucks boat. I should get a chance to have a proper look at it at the weekend.
OK, back to the original question (or the thread-creep question) How much "should" a 20' racing cat cost?
Here's how I look at it; how much cheaper is the F16 Viper vs. the F18 Capricorn? They are both built by the same builder, using many of the same parts, so how much more would it cost to stretch a Cap. to 20 feet? I'm thinking they could use most of the same parts again (same beams, daggers, rudders, slightly taller mast but of the same section, etc.) and the cost should be about the same difference as the Viper vs. Cap, only in the "More" direction, right?
If the F16 Viper is say, $2,000 less than the F18 Cap, than a F20 Cap should be about $2,000 more than the F18 Cap, right? (I have no idea if that is the actual price differential, just a shot in the dark, but you get the point I'm sure.)
Viper is built near Bangkok in Thailand.
Capricorn is built on an island called Batam in Indonesia (across the Straits from Singapore).
Same company, AHPC, builds and sells these boats, but outsourced to different suppliers for the hulls.
Share parts like beams when they are assembled in Bendigo, Australia.
Re: Beaver 20HT
[Re: Timbo]
#182797 06/24/0902:19 AM06/24/0902:19 AM
Main goals below 4000 in cost, speed about 25% slower then a F18, looks like a true catamaran and 60 kg ready to sail and assembled from all basic parts in less then 15 min. (car toppable). With all component made in respectable nations.
Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 06/24/0902:29 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
Re: Beaver 20HT
[Re: Wouter]
#182809 06/24/0906:49 AM06/24/0906:49 AM
A new base model infusion (no race package) is right around $19,200... that is as of a few months ago when I looked. I was quoted just slightly more for a Capricorn.
Well let's talk about the "cost to build" a Nacra Infusion F18 vs. a Nacra Inter 20.
Let's assume that due to the outrageous cost of Carbon, they are going to now use the same mast on the I20 as the Infusion, but a bit longer. (is it 2 feet?)
I will defer to all of you who have owned BOTH the Infusion and the I20 when I ask what is the difference in all the little parts:
The blocks, main, jib, spin, are they the same?
The rigging, is it the same gage wires, just longer?
The spin poles, same tubes, just longer?
The jib track, same on both? I heard the jib is the same.
I'm all for affordable big boats. If a big company such as Nacra or Hobie (really the only two big cat companies we have, right?) can cross-utilize as many parts on the two boats as possible, that should help bring the "cost to build" down, right?
So the cost differential between the two should be minimal, it should only be the extra costs of the longer hulls, larger spin and main, longer mast.
The builder should be able to get a discount since they are buying so many of the -same parts- for both boats, right?
I've not sailed on an Infusion, I don't know how much of their equipment could be put on a "new model" Inter 20 without any modifications, but if I were the builder, to keep costs down, I would try to use as many as possible on ALL my boats, from a 14-16-18-20 foot boat. Yes, the 14 might have some "stout" blocks on it, and maybe a little heavy rigging, using the same stuff as an Inter 20, but that should lead to a longer life, right?
Then you could market is as "Overbuilt, Strong like Bull, great for beginners who might pile it up from time to time." right?
If instead you are going to try to use different sized blocks, sheets, wires, beams, mast sections, etc. on every different sized boat, well, of course your parts costs are going to be much higher, leading to a more expensive boat, leading to less boat sales, right?
Blade F16 #777
Re: Beaver 20HT
[Re: Timbo]
#182845 06/24/0911:53 AM06/24/0911:53 AM
I'm still failing to see where we don't have an affordable 20-footer...
It seems that all the F18's are in the $18k-21k range. A new Nacra 20 with an aluminum mast is in the $20k-21k range. That's not too much of an increase considering the size differences in hulls, mast, and sails.
If you want to debate on how to bring overall costs down (labor, materials, overhead), then I think you might be headed somewhere. Seems like we're just typing to watch ourselves type.