Thursday, December 15, 2016

Seen at the 2016 Sailboat Show: Wrap-up

(Ed. Note: I repeat, this blog is not about timeliness.) (Way past) time to take the rest of my photos of the Annapolis 2016 Sailboat Show and package them into a wrap-up post on the 2016 event.

The Chris White designed Discovery 21 day-sailing trimaran (builders - Aquidneck Custom Boat Builders/Performance Multihulls). This is a 35 year old design being re-introduced in hi-tech (carbon fiber/honeycomb hulls). Hull weight was quoted at a stunning 340 kg. (750 lbs). If you want to put a lot of miles in for your afternoon sail, this tri should do it. (The Discovery 21 is the same concept as the Corsair Pulse 600 featured from the 2015 show.)




I've seen these interlocking plastic cubes  make up floating docks (Xinyi Floating Dock) but, at the show, in another demonstration of their versatility, these cubes were used to make a dry-sail dock for the J-70 keelboat.


Ronstan Shock, sheaveless blocks, was featured on the rigging photos of John Z's Classic Moth. Certainly for dinghies in lower load situations, this seems to be the lightest method of making up multi-part tackles or leading lines around.


The RS Quest family/school-training dinghy added some visual pizzazz this year with a color splash on the bench seats.


You can certainly build some swoopy deck-lines into the plastic boats. The Topper Topaz.


The webbing attachments to boom have been used by the skiffie crowd for some time and is now being seen on production boats (another photo of the Topper Topaz).



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

ITS GREAT TO SEE WHAT CAN BE A ONE MAN DINGY AND SO MANY CHOICES WOW !

P.S. THANKS FOR POSTING THE PHOTOS

OLD TIME GEEZER OFF THE END OF RUNWAY D.C. NATIONAL AIRPORT

LONG LIVE BAGGY PANTS

Bursledon Blogger said...

There's a small fleet of J90's at Hamble point dry sailed from those floating interlocking docks. Wonder if they get sold as part of the boat package, no anti foul painting.