T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1070.1 | ...categorized: | CDR::SPENCER | John Spencer | Thu Dec 15 1988 14:21 | 38 |
| Here's your list, with a few additions, put in some kind of categories:
(I'm most interesting Modern Cruising and Multihulls; the others are
interesting, but not important to me.)
TRADITIONAL CRUISING - (incl. CCA-type, now used for cruising mostly)
Starling Burgess
John Alden
Phil Rhodes
Laurent Giles
Nat Herreshoff
Olin Stephens
Sam Crocker
MODERN CRUISING
Bob Perry
Gary Hoyt
Bill Crealock
Ron Holland (tending into racing)
MODERN RACING
German Frers
Bruce Farr
Bob Miller/Ben Lexcen (wasn't it Bob, not Bill?)
Doug Peterson
Gary Mull
Bill Lee
MULTIHULL (These are designers who do other than just the flat-out racers.)
Dick Newick
Mick Price
John Shuttleworth
Rudy Choy
|
1070.2 | Missed some | AKOV12::DJOHNSTON | | Thu Dec 15 1988 16:32 | 28 |
| Don't forget Bill Tripp. He did a lot of the work credited to Doug
Peterson when he worked in that shop. Now he has reached a
creditablity all his own.
Also the teams of Nelson/Marek, Graham & Schlageter. What about
Joubert Nivelt and Briand? Lot's of hot boats to their name.
Brendon Dobroth can be skipped. The Johnstones sell a boat or two
also.
The designers I've dealt with most are Dobroth and Bruce Farr.
Currently, the hottest One Tonners are Farr designed. This applies
to the Fifties, too. Dobroth designed the new keel on Fat Tuesday
as well as the rudder. While FT was credited to Peterson, we found
that most of the design work was done by Tripp. Spoke to him on
several occasions to get some technical questions answered.
We are looking at some Farr designed boats to replace FT and were
recently down in Annapolis in the Farr studio talking to designers
getting their ideas on optimizing used One Tonners for IMS. Farr
designs are about the only ones that have the headroom, volume and
,surprisingly, interiors to meet the IMS rule. The Farr people
track the progress of all their designs and were incredibly helpful.
I'm off the track. What was the question again?
Dave
|
1070.3 | yet one more... | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | | Thu Dec 15 1988 16:57 | 5 |
| Anybody know much about Carl Ahlburg(sp)? I know he designed the
old Cape Dory's and the Kittiwakes. I've had some experience on
the Kittiwakes...they seen to be fine boats. Anybody else ever
sailed one?
|
1070.4 | Tripp & Alberg | CDR::SPENCER | John Spencer | Thu Dec 15 1988 20:17 | 17 |
| RE: .2,
>>> Don't forget Bill Tripp.
The more famous Bill Tripp died about ten years ago; he designed many very
beautiful CCA-era boats, with the Hinckley Bermuda 40 probably the best
known today.
RE: .3,
Carl Alberg -- Noted for full-keeled cruisers of the post-CCA vintage,
many in the early fiberglass period.
J.
|
1070.5 | And Yet Another | STEREO::LEVINE | | Fri Dec 16 1988 09:17 | 7 |
| Let us not forget the architect that designed the original O'Day
27, the only good O'Day ever designed and built. (Put down the
rocks!) I believe his name is Alan Guerney. The safest, most
forgiving [and loving] sloop ever, and a h**of a racer! as well
as a super family cruiser. (Not too many found today..the owners
now what they have.)
|
1070.6 | Olin Stephens | LDYBUG::FACHON | | Fri Dec 16 1988 11:03 | 16 |
| I should never have started a list. Sorry. Of course there
are dozens and dozens of names we could mention. I was thinking
more about discussing particular favorites and why.
For me, Olin Stephens is a big favorite. He captured
my imagination with "Ranger" (yes, there was collaboration
with Starling Burgess). The power and beauty of that
J boat were aboslutlely awe inspiring . And I only
saw pictures. The long overhangs, the knuckle bow, the
aggresive sheer-line. Olin's designs are simple, elegant,
and powerful. He brought displacement hulls a long way!
As some of you might recall, I feel that moving displacement
smoothly and quickly is every bit as challenging a problem as
obtaining absolute speed.
|
1070.7 | R.D. Culler | GONAVY::GINGER | | Fri Dec 16 1988 13:42 | 17 |
| Got to get in a word for the Traditionalists! Pete Culler, called
Capt'n Pete by his friends designed lots of small, traditional type
boats. He worked in a for several years at Concordia Co, and designed
the Concordia Sloop there. He published a couple books, and a comple
catalog of his works has been published since he died.
I met Pete and visited in his shop a few times. Ive built several
of his designs. His eye for line and proportion was fine, his drafting
was poor. I once asked him about some missing data on a drawing,
his reply was something like 'if you know how to build boats you
wont need that detail'.
Pete was a driving force in establishing the TSCA to lobby to get
the Coast Guard to drop their crazy reulations on small boat design-
by the Coast Guard test a grand banks dory was unsafe- a perfect
cube raft got the best rating on the test. The rules were dropped.
|
1070.8 | 4 favorites | CDR::SPENCER | John Spencer | Fri Dec 16 1988 16:57 | 36 |
| RE: .6,
OK, just my favorites:
Bill Tripp -- Known for his lovely overhangs, low and well-proportioned
deckhouses and wide sidedecks, and his trademark wide transom (which
gives such a spacious and comfortable cockpit. Look at a B40 closely
if you've any doubts. He also performed a remarkable aesthetic feat
with the LeCompte Medalist, when you consider all he accomplished in
just 33'!
Sam Crocker - Designer of the prettiest flushdeck cruisers around; most
people know him best through the Stone Horse. He also pioneered (on
larger boats) opening the cockpit seating area up all the way back to the
transom, thereby giving 3-4' more in the cockpit (as in the Stone Horse)
or in the cabin (as in his 30' cutter series). For coastal waters,
where fear of shipping a sea aboard into such an enormous or aft-placed
cockpit is less than at sea, they're great. He deserves to be much
better know than he is; his son Sturgis still runs the family yard in
Manchester, MA.
Bob Perry -- The first and lasting master of the modern fiberglass
cruiser. His greatest contribution to the art has been the modern
"cruising" fin keel underbody, as exemplified in his Valiant designs,
among many. Just ask Alan! (or his crew.)
Dick Newick - Having now sailed on several Newick designs (among other
cruising multihulls), I find there is something in almost all of Dick's
designs which quicken my blood. No doubt he's got his idiocyncratic
design preferences (meaning quirks and shortcomings), but so much of what
he does is right, starting with his basic design philosophy that fast is
fun, and must be safe and easy to manage. And his shapes are second to
none among all past and present multihull designers in the world.
J.
|
1070.9 | | VLNVAX::FRENIERE | | Fri Dec 16 1988 17:42 | 12 |
| Anyone know of a designer Mcgreggor. I have a 34' cutter that is
all Alden in construction. It is practically identical to the Alden
36'Costal Cruiser. I have a sail plan and the design block shows
a "24" which is the waterline length and the designer is Macgreggor
and I htink the office is on Boyleston St. in Boston. It would be
1940s to 1955 vintage. The plan however dooes not state Alden anwhere
on it.
Thanks
Don
|
1070.10 | | ASABET::HO | | Fri Dec 16 1988 18:55 | 73 |
|
A few designers that stick in my mind for a variety of reasons:
THE LEAST EDUCATED DESIGNER - Ben Lexcen/Bob Miller. As high school
dropout he never mastered the math that many contemporaries rely heavily
on. Yet it was his insight that literally turned the world of twelve
meter keels upside down with Australia's winged keel. Also a one-
of-a-kind personality in field of bland technocrats.
THE SECOND LEAST EDUCATED DESIGNER - Olin Stephens. He made it
through high school at least. Job prospects for 19 year old college
dropouts during the depression weren't too promising so the old
man gave him job drawing up a new boat. With DORADE Stephens hit
a home run with a breakthrough boat. There were very few strikouts
in the many years and boats that followed.
A WELL EDUCATED DESIGNER - Nat Herreshoff. He made through the
same place Stephens dropped out of and acquired a reputation as
a virtuoso engineer designing and fabricating innovative mechanical
devices for sail and power vessels. Yet his most succesful racing
boats were designed using a pine block and jacknife at strange hours
of the morning.
THE BEST EDUCATED DESIGNER - Jerry Milgram. Teaches boat design
at the place the previous two went to. Designer and owner of the
ulgliest and, some say, the most underhanded racing boat ever built
- CASCADE. This is a cat ketch (two mains, no jib) with an IOR
rating so low that, in certain conditions, only had to finish to win.
Also the designer of ONDINE IV, an 80' IOR maxi which, two years
after commisioning, was sold for less the the cost of its initial
sail inventory. Finally, a principal perpetrator of the IMS velocity
prediction program which makes a J30 GIVE 10 seconds a mile to an
S2 34 (in PHRF it's the other way around).
PIONEER IN NEW TECHNOLOGY - Whatsisname (darn, it's on the tip of
my finger). Really into modeling and towing tank technology. First
to design an America's Cup challanger using towing tank data. The
resulting boat MARINER was an unusual looking blunt ended design
remarkable for its slowness. Ted Turner was asked to skipper.
When he looked at the hull he is quoted as saying "Christ, even
s**t is pointed at both ends".
BEST RECOVERY BY A DESIGNER - Whatsisname again. In partnership
with Dave Pedrick, Whatsisname redeemed himself in the design of
STAR AND STRIPES which won the cup back from Australia. Some one
told him about using scaling factors in using tank data in the years
that intervened.
MOST SINGLE MINDED DESIGNER - John Marshall. Not even a designer
but the one who believed the weatherman who said it would blow like
stink in January in Australia. The STARS AND STRIPES design effort
pivoted on this assumption. There were some races in the eliminations
that made this look like the wrong assumption but Marshall stuck
to his guns. Good thing he did.
MOST TIGHTFISTED DESIGNER - Ted Hood. Designs 'em himself, builds
'em himself, and sails 'em himself. Still using the same boat he
built eons ago, ROBIN. Still winning a lot of races with it too.
ROBIN's heavy, elegant, but fast. Not too many boats with that
combination.
MOST EFFICIENT DESIGNER - Bruce Kirby. Sketched out the LASER during
a lunch break on a paper napkin. Then sat back to watch the $$$$
roll in.
MOST ENDURING DESIGNER - Olin Stephens again. DORADE is still
sailing. COURAGEOUS is still used. And my 30 year old interclub
dinghy still floats.
MOST LAID BACK DESIGNER - Hobie Alter. Who else.
- gene
|
1070.11 | Mariner - Brit's million dollar mistake | BPOV06::KEENAN | | Mon Dec 19 1988 08:55 | 15 |
|
I think what'shisname is Brit Chance. Mariner and the trial horse
Valiant? were both given "fastback" stern section. They produced
quarterwaves almost big enough for a surfboard to ride.
One unconfirmed story from a friend who worked in the Newport yard
that serviced the Mariner syndicate. Two straps were used on the
hoist to haul the boat, forward and aft of the keel. Once when
Mariner was being lowered in, the rear strap slid off the highly
sloped stern. The transom was said to have missed the seawall by
inches as the boat dropped into the water with a BIG splash.
Later, they had to cut Mariners stern off for a redesign. Hitting
the wall might have saved some time and money!
|
1070.12 | | VLNVAX::FRENIERE | | Tue Dec 20 1988 09:29 | 9 |
| re my .9
Charles G. MacGregor
Naval Architect
185 Devonshire St.
Boston, Mass.
|
1070.13 | A Life in Boats | ECADSR::FINNERTY | | Sat Jan 21 1989 17:09 | 13 |
|
For folks who enjoy this sort of thing, there's a book entitled
"A Life in Boats, The Years Before the War" by Waldo Howland which
is a personal and entertaining account of boats, boating, and the
people who sailed and designed them around Buzzards Bay during the
years 1900-1940.
It's the sort of nostalgic look at the beautiful sailing ships
of the past that makes you self-conscious about owning an auxilliary.
- Jim
|
1070.14 | Plus another | SNOC01::SMITHPETER | | Tue Jan 24 1989 20:39 | 10 |
| WHAT ABOUT FIFE
Because I have never seen a design or 'photo of a Fife boat
which does not look great...and because I have one. Built in 1911,
and still in great condition.
Regards,
Peter
|
1070.15 | Ray Hunt | SLSTRN::COOK | | Tue Jun 06 1989 16:40 | 10 |
| RAY HUNT
Although Ray Hunt is probably best known for his deep-v hulls ie. Black
Watch, he did do great work with Concordia way back when. He was also
responsible for the 210, 110 and the 510 racing classes. Although RH
died in the late '60s (?) Ray Hunt Associates is still going in Boston
with John Deknatel and Peter Boyce, who did the new Concordia 50.
Glenn
|
1070.16 | William Garden; Romantic and Imaginative | CIVIC::BUCHANAN | | Thu Jun 07 1990 22:06 | 9 |
| I really can't believe that no one mentioned one of Canada's great
natural resources, William Garden. For imagination, romance and
incredible cartoon-like drafting (meant in the most positive sense) he
can't be beat. Check out his 60' by 5' double-ended motor-rocket in
the book William Garden; Yacht Designs. I visited his studio up in
Vancouver, B.C. The man is completely dedicated to what he does. Most
impressive.
RDB
|
1070.17 | Cotton Blossom; Best of Fife? | CIVIC::BUCHANAN | | Thu Jun 07 1990 22:09 | 5 |
| RE. .14
What Fife design do you have? I did some sailing on Cotton Blossom,
ex. Halloween. Great Fife design which used to be in Marblehead.
BEEEUTIFUL!!!
|