Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The design was built by the Lagoon catamaran division of Jeanneau in France and was the smallest catamaran in their product line. The division was later sold to Construction Navale Bordeaux (CNB) which became part of Groupe Beneteau. Production started in 1999 and the improved Lagoon 380 S2 model was introduced in 2003.
Lagoon Catamaran [208] Lagoon 410: 1997: Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost: Jeanneau Construction Navale Bordeaux Lagoon Catamaran [209] Lagoon 420: 2006: Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost: Lagoon Catamaran [210] Lagoon 440: 2004: Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost: Lagoon Catamaran [211] Lagoon 450: 2014: Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost Patrick le Quément Nauta ...
This page was last edited on 1 February 2025, at 00:22 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Nacra Sailing is a Dutch company that manufactures a line of small catamaran sailboats, or beachcats. [1] NACRA was founded in 1975 to tap into the market created by Hobie Alter the founder of Hobie Cat, and several other companies offering small fiberglass catamarans designed to be sailed off the beach by a crew of one or two.
catamaran = two symmetric hulls; proa = two asymmetric hulls, reverse-shunting (interchangeable bow/stern) trimaran = three hulls; quadrimaran = four hulls;
The Stiletto 27 is an American trailerable catamaran sailboat that was designed by Bill Higgins and Don Ansley as a racer/cruiser and first built in 1976. [1] [2] [3] [4]The design was originally marketed by the manufacturer just as the Stiletto, but later became the Stiletto 27 to differentiate it from the later 1983 Stiletto 30 and 1985 Stiletto 23 designs.
The boat was marketed as a family weekender with full length sleeping berths for five adults, cooking facilities and a small but useful separate heads (toilet). Hirondelles have an outboard motor as auxiliary power, mounted in a well in the centre of the cockpit. The sailing performance of the Hirondelle was excellent in its day, and is still ...
It was slightly smaller than 19 ft × 8 ft (5.8 m × 2.4 m), and was a solid fiberglass catamaran with a solid core deck and traditional catamaran sail plan. The design's chief limitation was its weight of over 500 lb (230 kg) with approximately 300 square feet (28 m 2 ) of sail area.