Drifter Trimarans

The Drifter trimarans are sort of a modern version of the outrigger canoe, being designed to be paddled or sailed. There are some boats out there like this, mostly small tris that use kayaks for the main hull. This works fine, but kayaks have some limitations for this use. It all started when a retired college professor I know wanted a boat to explore the local rivers and bays where we live, but didn't really know what kind of boat would be best for his purpose. He thought of getting a canoe, but he liked to sail, and wasn't that excited about paddling everywhere. I told him I thought I could design a boat that would work for him. I was picturing a small tri that could be paddled or sailed with a simple rig, very stable, with a comfortable seat, light weight, and easy to launch off of a beach. I did some drawings, and he liked the concept, and over the next few months, I built him the first Drifter 12. It is a simple flat bottom design, built out of 1/8" luan plywood, with a free standing windsurfer mast, and a roll up sail. It has a lee board, and a kick-up rudder.The whole boat would come apart in 15 minutes and go on top of his car. The amas also fit into the main hull, another way to transport it, and great for shipping. The boat probably weighs about 100 lb. It is easy to paddle, and really fun, and easy to sail. It's great for inexperienced sailors, because you launch and land with the sail rolled up, and set sail once you are out on the water. It's a very enjoyable way to get out on the water and explore protected waters. The owner has been having a great time with it, and even takes his wife along, even though it was really designed for one person. It's a little overloaded, but they do fine, because the boat is so stable.

One thing leads to another, and while on a camping trip to Florida, I was showing some friends pictures of the Drifter 12, and describing what it was like. They were interested but wanted one designed for two people. I took the basic design, and stretched to 15'. I went home, and spent the next couple of months building the Drifter 15. It is just like the Drifter 12, but is designed for one or two persons. I shipped the boat to Florida in a crate, and fortunately it arrived intact. Next time I'll build a stronger crate! The amas on this design also fit in the main hull. It is a fun boat to sail, and faster than the smaller model, with a taller mast. These are not designed as high performance boats, but sail well because they are so easily driven with a simple rig. Basically the same concept as the Fulmar 19, which has always been a favorite of mine. This would be a great boat for camp cruising for one person. You could carry plenty of camping gear without the weight of the second person.

The latest boat in the series is the Drifter 14, which I build earlier this summer for my own use. It is more high performance than the others, with bigger amas to give it more sail carrying power. The amas no long fit into the main hull, but everything fits very nicely onto a custom rack on my Toyota pickup. It's quite a fast boat, considering the simple rig I am using. The center of effort of the rig is low, so there is no problem with pitchpoling, and going downwind in stronger winds is really fun. I made up a special masthead fitting so I could put on stays, out of 1/8" spectra, and still allow the mast to rotate to furl the sail. The stays keep the mast from bending, which gives you better sail shape. I can add a small roller furling jib, which really adds to the performance. All of these boats are steered with rudder pedals; it's nice always having your hands free. You can eat lunch while you are cruising along.This design is mostly meant for one person, but I can take my wife along for a ride. She wants to take it out by herself next time, after sailing the smaller version.

There are plans available Here for four different versions of the Drifter trimarans. There is the Drifter 12 , the Drifter 12L , which has longer amas, and a taller mast, the Drifter 14 , and the Drifter 16 , which is an enlarged version of the 14, for two people.

My wife did a couple of nice videos of the boats:

Anyone interested in one of these boats can contact me at - [email protected]

Plans for the four Drifters are available at Duckworks

  • Drifter 12L

  
 
 

Drifter Trimarans

Saturday, november 5, 2011.

drifter 14 trimaran

2 comments:

drifter 14 trimaran

Great idea! I'm Dario, from Spain. I found this site while looking for small trimaran plans to built because I recently get the spanish basic sailing license (19' or less). Thanks for your work!

I was looking for plans for the Drifter 16 Trimaran, but like the twelve better, or as much since I wish to carry the boat in my 8' pickup truck bed. I will be sailing in a large shallow bay (Birch Bay ) just south of Blaine, WA. USA. Please advise me on how to get the full plans or at least study drawings from you. Thank you.

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Multihull Structure Thoughts

Discussion in ' Multihulls ' started by oldmulti , May 27, 2019 .

oldmulti

oldmulti Senior Member

Drifter trimarans are designed by Mark Gumprecht. This one is the Drifter 17 which is a small trailable cabin trimaran for bay and river cruising etc. The tri is 17 x 12 foot with a 22 foot plywood and timber wing mast that can be home built. The main is 115 square foot with a 60 square foot fore triangle. I do not know displacement figures. Mark designs light boats that require good building practice, but these boats structurally are very good. Follow the plan and you will have a good boat. The design main hull has 6 mm bulkheads, frames and stringers as per jpegs. The hull skin is 3 mm ply with 130 gsm e-glass in epoxy on the outside doubled over the bottom to the waterline. The "chine" on the main hull is strip planked to provide a smoother water flow. Additional glass layers are also put on the stem. The wing deck and decks are 6 mm ply covered with 170 gsm glass. There is a short 40 x 60 mm bow spirit for a gennaker. Bunk boards are 6 mm with 18 x 38 mm cleats glued to the boards. The cross beams are box sections with top and bottom timber flanges and 6 mm plywood sides. The beams have bulkheads inside. The beams are glassed over with 170 gsm e glass in epoxy. The cross beam hinges are stainless steel. The floats are the same basic structure as the main hull. The builder of the mast describes its build. “Drifter 17 mast is relatively easy to build, if you have good woodworking skills. I would not recommend it for those who do not know how to make scarfs. It is built in 1/8 ″ CP (~ 3 mm) and the beams in spruce, laminated on the outside with a layer of 6 oz (170g) glass and epoxy. I use PVC foam to make a rounded leading edge. There is a 1/2 ″ ”(13 mm) fiberglass tube on the trailing edge, split, for the sail headline. You can add carbon if you want to make it stronger, but I think the base mast with glass cloth is strong enough for a boat of this size. The basic section without rigging weighs 27lbs (12.25 kg) for 22 '(6.70m) long. The profile cord is 6 1/2 "" (16.5 cm), before adding the mainsail rail, which ultimately gives 7 ″ "(17.8cm) long, and 2 5/8" "( 66.7 mm) thick ( external dimensions ). The rigging is stainless steel cable 1/8 "" (3mm) 1 × 19.” The jpegs give some hints. An interesting design.  

Attached Files:

Drifter 17 sailplan.jpg, drifter-17-tri-sailing-2.jpeg, drifter-17-trimaran-8a.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-9a.jpg, drifter-trimaran-17-36914.jpg, drifter-trimaran-17-sail 4.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-1a.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-2.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-3a.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-4s.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-5a.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-6s.jpg, drifter-17-trimaran-7a.jpg, drifter 17 22 ft mast.jpg, drifter 17 mast construct 1.jpg.

Nolan Clark

Nolan Clark Junior Member

Oldmulti, Thank you so much for the tremendous wealth of information you have been providing. It is greatly appreciated! Just one quick question. in your last post, about the wing mast you state "It is built in 1/8 ″ CP (~ 3 mm)" What is "CP"? I'm not familiar with that abbreviation. Thank you again for sharing your wealth of knowledge!  
Nolan. Sorry, I am use to reading abbreviations from European sources. CP = plywood (good quality for the mast). Jarcat's 20 foot catamarans have slightly simpler wing masts with 1.2 mm aircraft birch plywood skins with a 75 x 25 mm Spruce centre spar and a 25 x 20 mm aft spar, all covered with 84 gsm cloth.  

Jarcat with wingmast.jpg

Final boat from Mark Grumpecht. A small cruising catamaran. The cat is 22 x 8.5 foot weighing 1900 lbs with 24 foot wing mast as used on the Drifter 17 trimaran. The cat has a lifting centreboard and central rudder. Mark designed and built the cat in one year. It is plywood with light e-glass cloth outside. It uses mahogany wood on the interior. I do not know any structural dimensions but similar cats (Jarcat 20) are 6 mm plywood throughout and the Drifter 17 tri has 6 mm plywood decks. The cat has aft sugar scoops with steps. The cat is trailable on a 3500 lbs capable trailer (the trailer weighs 700 lbs). The engine is a 6 HP long shaft outboard. The custom mast raising rig, uses trailer winch. The cat has two single speed winches mounted on the cabin top. The cockpit is 5.5 x 6.5 foot and the cat has a micro galley with a 2 burner propane cook top and small sink. The cat has a custom private head with door on port side and a thetford porcelain marine head. The cat has a double berth with 2 child single berths. The front mini tramp can have 1 adult or 2 children on it is very comfy and cool to be on while sailing or at anchor. The cat is a coastal cruiser that is claimed to perform well.  

customcat1maybe MG 02a.jpg

Customcat 1 mg.jpg, customcat mg may 102b.jpg, customcat mg pos 102c.jpg, customcat pod 102d.jpg, customcat pos mg 102e.jpg.

The next e book for possible downloading is again a classic about modern multihulls. Chris Whites the cruising multihull. You will need to do a little work though. The attached address needs to be pasted into a new web page address bar. When the page comes up it will have a green bar with the word download in it. Press down load. The page will then do a 30 second count down and then put on screen a box saying “I am not a robot” click on that box then press the download green box below. The PDF will download to your computer. Now important click on the downloaded PDF and it will show the start pages of the full book. Now press “save as” and file the book on your computer before you explore another item. This site immediately overwrites the download with another download if you try and get another e book. Some of the future books I will suggest are up to 70 megs in size so check your space on your device. Can someone who has downloaded the E book please tell the tread to confirm the instructions are correct or advise of an update to the instructions. The web address is: The Cruising Multihull - PDF Free Download https://epdf.pub/the-cruising-multihull.html The download is 42 meg. Also be warned the search bar on this site brings up some very different books on "cruising" and it is not about sailing!  
VPLP are a very forward thinking design group that not only have designed global race winning yachts and some of the world’s largest cruising catamarans but they also have a very active research and development department. They have developed with Benateau the WOW a single reefable wing sail rig and now they have developed a 2 part reefable wing sail rig. Drawing on extensive experience in the field of rigid sail development, VPLP Design developed a two-element wing sail which is furlable, reefable and entirely automated. “We’re offering a wind propulsion system that is reliable, simple and automated,” says Marc Van Peteghem. “We have developed a reefable and furlable rigging concept which exploits the aerodynamic qualities of multi-elements profiles.” Entirely automated, self-supporting and rotating 360°, Oceanwings® adapts its angle of incidence to the vessel’s point of sail to ensure optimal propulsion. Power is managed by trimming camber and twist. “Not only does it provide exceptional control, it’s also efficient to the point of halving the surface area required to propel a vessel under conventional sail.” VPLP Design is developing several concepts which use this patented technology. 360° rotating unstayed mast ensures optimum trimming regardless of wind direction. Camber is adjustable and reversible. Twist can be implemented to follow wind gradient and thus insure optimal angle of attack along span. The jpegs give the idea. The mast elements are carbon fibre. The tri is a Tricat 23.5 which is 23.5 x 14.75 foot with a weight of 1300 lbs. The standard sloop rig has a 36 foot mast with a 215 square foot main and a 110 square foot jib. The final jpeg is the standard boat. Tricat no longer produce this model.  

VPLP wing reefable 1.jpg

Vplp reefable wingmast t.jpeg, vplp reefable wing a.jpg, vplp reefable wingmast f.jpg, vplp reef wing c.jpg, vplp reef wingmast g.jpg, vplp reefable wing mast sa.jpg, tricat 23 std sloop.jpg.

Carbon3 is a carbon fiber trimaran with the following specifications: 40 x 32.2 foot weighing 4000 lbs and displacing 4600 lbs. This tri may be 40 foot but it has no internal accommodation, it is a pure racer. The rotating canting carbon fibre wing mast has carbon diamond shrouds and aramid cap shrouds. The mainsail: 860 square foot, Jib: 380 square foot, Code 0: 1050 square foot, Genakker: 1500 square foot. The Bruce number is 2.74, seriously fast. The top speed recorded is 32 knots. Built Denmark (now sold to Hong Kong). Material: Resin infused Carbon Sandwich. Designed by Nigel Iren. I do not know any specs for this tri but a light weight skin would be the easy part. The cross beam and associated bulkheads would be the real design challenge. Also the foils and the mast structure would be an interesting challenge with a lot of carbon being infused or autoclave. The builder comment “It became a state-of-the-art project,” he says, “and we chose only to use the best. We’re also very familiar with vacuum infusion as we work on a lot of carbon fibre boats, and we wanted to use that technology, because if we didn’t we would have been concerned about losing flexibility.” The result was Carbon 3: a lightweight, strong but flexible craft with the speed to spare. The jpegs give an idea.  

carbon 3 trimaran sailing.jpg

Carbon 3 sail 5.jpg, carbon 3 sail plan 1.jpg, carbon3-heli-2.jpg, carbon-3-sailk.jpg, carbon 3 sail 2.jpg, carbon 3 mh mold.jpeg, carbon 3 hull molds halves.jpeg, carbon 3 c.jpeg, carbon 3 assembly.jpg, carbon 3 deck.jpeg, carbon 3 a.jpeg, carbon 3 b.jpeg.

Charles de Bodinat designed and built a 29.5 foot “trimaran”. But it was unusual, with the central hull being thinner than the side ones. The purpose was to combine the habitability of a cat hulls with a smaller centre pod for a central board, the weights of anchors and motor. I also wanted to have central rigidity for the front stay. It was called “Tricat” because of its mix between trimaran and catamaran. This boat initially had a normal central mast and rigging. The mainsail was a Lanteen but although the sails were efficient, they were difficult to handle with the traditional rigging with a single mast because you have to change the yard and the sail from one side to the other of the mast each time you tack. So, he had the idea to combine a bipod mast and a lateen sail with a boom, so that the sail can turn alone. That combination created a very stable mast and flexibility of the yard. The bipole mast is in aluminium. The top of the yard is made of a windsurf mast. You can sail only with the main sail if the wind is strong and take reefs on it (the yard is in two sliding parts). A jib can be added up to 130 square foot or any spinnaker on a pole. With any sail area the boat is well balanced because you can adapt the center board back or forward. With three on board, having a 55 square foot jib, with force 2 to 3, we sailed about 6 knots average, up to 10 knots by force 4. We have not tried yet with a bigger jib or spinnaker. The boat is constructed in plywood /epoxy with fiberglass coat at underwater parts. The beams are in aluminium. The platform is rigid and you can sit on the deck sides or in the middle with the feet lowered in the central hull. The boat is assembled and taken apart directly on the trailer. The process takes about one hour for the hulls and the platform, then one hour for the rigging. If you count the time to put the boat in the water or to lift it and fix it well on the trailer, it needs a total of three hours for two people. The major point about this post is the rig not the hull design or structure. The rig idea could be applied to other cats if you wanted to experiment. Jpegs give an idea.  

latin-lover-trimaran-2.jpg

Latin-lover-trimaran-3.jpg, latin-lover-trimaran-4.jpg, latin-lover-trimaran-6.jpg, latin-lover-trimaran-7.jpg, latin-lover-trimaran-8.jpg, latin-lover-trimaran-1.jpg, latin lover orig format s.jpg.

Mair 47 cat designed as an aluminium kit cat from Western Australia. The cat is 47 x 24 foot, built weight is 19400 lbs with an average displacement is 22400 lbs. The sloop rig mainsail is 775 square foot, 421 square foot jib and 1290 square foot genoa. The aluminium tube mast is 56 foot off the deck. The length to beam is 8.7:1. The cat has low aspect ratio keels and skeg mounted rudders. Underwing clearance is 3.2 foot. The forward freeboard is 6.1 foot. Its basic engines are two 50 horsepower desils. The structure is all aluminium. All plate is 5083 and 6082 extruded sections. The hull bottoms are 5 mm, hull sides are 4 mm, decks 4 mm, cabin superstructure 4 mm, main cabin roof 3 mm. Hull frames are spaced every 700 mm. The hulls and decks have fore aft stringers. Internal fitout is your choice but probably plywood and timber. The real advantage of building in aluminium is the builder will have the skill to do their own aluminium mast, integrated chain plates etc which can be a real cost saving. The other advantage, if you can build the external shell smoothly enough, is you don’t have to paint the cat ever. Unfortunately, most people want the cat to reflect a colourful aspect of their lives. Goodbye to $30,000 and a lot of hard work. The only downside of aluminium is corrosion control. This aluminium “kit” to build the boat is delivered to your location as a 30 x 7.6 foot box that weighs 15,900 lbs. All you have to do is weld the pre-cut labelled parts together in the right sequence, fair the resulting structure, paint it, fit out the internal furniture, run the electric, do the mechanicals, fit out the boat handling gear, do the rig and after 10,000 hours of work and you are sailing. This is a solid cruising cat that will go anywhere.  

Mair 47 sail 1.jpg

Mair 47 sail 2 s.jpg, mair 47 aft a.jpg, mair 47 side view x.jpg, mair 47 semi top n.jpg, mair 47 fwd top b.jpg.

Chris White designed the EXPLORER 44 which is 44 x 28 foot weighing 10800 lbs with a 60 foot mast and 1021 square foot sail area. The EXPLORER 44 trimaran was to design a fast and comfortable boat that could be built and maintained economically. We all know that multihulls, with their many hulls, complex crossbeams and need for high strength at low weight are costly labour intensive structures to build. Chris’s answer is simple; go LONG and SIMPLIFY. By extending the hull length out to 44' an excellent interior plan can be achieved that will accommodate up to six. Simplification must occur on many fronts in order to achieve a meaningful cost reduction. Another area particularly important to cost control in a trimaran design is the configuration of the crossbeams. The EXPLORER 44 crossbeams are fabricated from modern composites to achieve very high strength and stiffness at low weight but the shape of the crossbeams and their attachment to the hulls is designed to be easy to build. Chris uses a low aspect ratio fin keel on the 44 because after 18 years of first hand experience with my own trimaran Juniper, which goes to windward just fine with the same fixed fin configuration used in the EXPLORER 44. Chris says a deep daggerboard will allow 2 or 3 degrees better pointing, but at what cost and longer build time. A lightweight trimaran with slender hulls, streamlined decks and crossbeams, a powerful sail plan and well made sails will go to windward exceptionally well with a shoal draft fixed fin. Construction is in modern epoxy composite. Hulls are designed for Core-Cell foam core with epoxy/glass skins. Decks are foam cored epoxy/ glass and crossbeams are built from uni-glass and carbon fiber/epoxy with streamlined fairings. Accommodation plan provides a separate aft cabin which can be configured with either two single bunks or a very large double. The main cabin contains a functional galley with generous standing headroom and a large saloon that has seating for 6 and a panoramic view through large eye level windows. There is a loo and a forward double cabin. Chris’s comment on performance are: “The rig is a 7/8 th sloop with a powerful fully battened mainsail and roller reefing jib. All sail handling and reefing can be done easily from the cockpit. Her wide beam and powerful floats will turn sailpower into forward motion. Driven hard, speeds of 15 to 20 knots under working sail will be common. Average cruising speeds over distance of 10 to 12 knots will be typical with a fair breeze.” This is an offshore capable tri that is a simple fast cruiser.  

Explorer 44 13.jpg

Explorer 44 12.png, explorer 44 14.png, explorer 4 6a.jpg, explorer 44 7a.jpg, explorer 44 8a.jpg, explorer 44 1a.jpg, explorer 44 2a.jpg, explorer 44 9a.jpg, explorer 44 10a.jpg, explorer 44 11a.jpg.

The Race to Alaska is a fun race that’s main rule is the “vessel” you choose must be sailed and/or rowed from Port Townsend, Washington to Ketchikan Alaska (total distance of 750 miles) via the inside passage or outside Vancouver Island. There can be no support for the boats along the way. The boats range from kayaks to 32 foot carbon sailing cats and anything in between. The majority of the boats are trailable for the trip home. Russell Brown won the single handed category in a G32 trailable cat recently. A fun race then this entry turned up. A race organiser thought someone made a mistake but it said: Tritium Racing a 72 x 60 foot trimaran displacing 15,700 lbs carrying 3000 square foot plus of sail upwind and over 5000 square foot of sail downwind. He then looked at the crew list on the boat, an all pro crew of America’s Cuppers, Olympians, world champs, national champs, one of the runners up for the Rolex Sailor of the year, and R2AK veteran Tripp Burdwho was half of the Team Freeburd that finished 4th in R2AK 2015 onboard an Arc-22 beach cat. He asked if they had entered the right race, Tritium said yes and they had organised a pizza sponsor for the race. The betting on the race winner was futile after that. So, what is Tritium racing? Some sailors who wanted to have fun and occasionally found sponsors to help them have fun. The tri started out as a VPLP designed in 2000 a 60-foot trimaran from the ORMA class. It was very beamy, pre-impregnated carbon structure, raised beams and high volume floats with a cloud of sail. Ex-Bonduelle then became GITANA 12 in 2005 and upgraded with a revised deck layout, larger cockpit, revamped interior (electricity, electronics, hydraulics…), altered daggerboard casings and rig and a new set of rudders for a period before being brought by Tritium racing. The boat was then modified - with floats lengthened to 72 feet - and cross beams reinforced, for the new loads of a bigger rig. The tri was then used by Artemis Racing for testing of AC wing and dagger foils for its AC 72 campaign. From 2012 Tritium 72 foot racing tri was used in local races, breaking records etc. In 2013 it raced to Hawaii doing the Transpac, missing the record by 2 hours. This annoyed Tritium racing who borrowed a 105 foot tri in 2015 and broke the Transpac record by 24 hours doing it in 3 days 8 hours (25 knot average). The 72 footer then “became” Lending Club doing charter and racing from San Francisco breaking more records. Then came the entry into the Race to Alaska. A 40 knot boat racing against people in kayaks, interesting. The jpegs give you some idea of some of the history. The final jpeg gives an idea of what Gitana thinks a tri should sail like today in 14,000 miles dual handed races.  

Gitiana 12 sail plan 1.jpg

Gitana 12 sail.jpg, tritium 72 1.jpg, tritium 72 3.jpg, tritium 72 trailer sailer huh.jpg, tritium 72 2.jpg, tritium 72 as lending club.jpg, tritium lending club 2a.jpg, tritium 72 interior a.jpg, tritium 72 in race to alaska.jpg, gitanasa17 foiling.jpg.

Turanor is a Swiss solar powered catamaran that circled the globe in 2011/12. It did the entire trip on solar power and batteries. No fossil fuels involved. Why is this cat of interest? It is about the structure but we will get to that later. Turanor is 100 x 49 foot (solar panels folded out make it 30 foot wider) displaces 190,000 lbs and is powered by 4 electric motors that draw about 20 kilowatts at its 5 knot cruise speed. The 4 motors can produce 120 kilowatts of power if needed and can drive the cat at 14 knots at maximum speed but the power drain is substantial. The 5400 square foot of solar panels provide 94 kilowatts of power under idea conditions which is feed to banks of lithium iron batteries for overnight or cloudy day running. Turanor can run 3 days in overcast conditions. The cost of the panels alone even at today’s prices would cost over $100,000, the rest of the power setup would cost another $300,000 plus. This isn’t a cheap way to cross oceans. But back to the structure. The reason its of interest is that it can be a facsimile of cruising cat hull of similar size. The “legs” between the demi hulls and the above water main hull do not replicate a catamaran or tri cross beam but the rest of the structure has some relevance. The whole vessel is a carbon fibre (CF) epoxy Airex PVC structure. It was vacuum bagged and used prepregs in many areas. There are 3 basic layups: the main central hull shell, demi hulls and decks which are 2.2 mm (.09 inch) CF outside 50 mm Airex PVC 2 mm CF inside. The cloth orientation is 60% is 0/90 degrees, 40% is at 45/45 degrees biaxal. The 11 bulkheads in the main hull are 1.2 mm CF 40 mm Airex PVC 1.2 mm CF. The legs connecting the demi hulls to the main central hull are tapered boxes with 1.2 mm CF 40 mm Airex PVC 1.2 mm CF walls. The layups connecting the legs to the various hulls are doubled and reinforced with 50 mm CF tapes. The 4 crew did not lack comfort as the jpegs show. 6 double berth cabins and a main saloon that can house 40 people without any crowding. But when you are crossing oceans at 5 knots you probably need some private space.  

Turanor 3.jpg

Turanor top 1s.jpg, turanor 2a.jpg, turanor overview x.jpg, turanor 4.jpg, turanor solar-powed-boat-design 2.jpg, turanor solar-powed-boat-design.jpg, turanor solar acht.jpg, turanor build 2.jpg, turanor build 1.jpg, turanor build 3.jpg, turanor-planetsolar-interior.jpg, turanor bridge 1.jpg, turanor interior 1v.jpg.

catsketcher

catsketcher Senior Member

oldmulti said: ↑ Chris White designed the EXPLORER 44 which is 44 x 28 foot weighing 10800 lbs with a 60 foot mast and 1021 square foot sail area. The EXPLORER 44 trimaran was to design a fast and comfortable boat that could be built and maintained economically. We all know that multihulls, with their many hulls, complex crossbeams and need for high strength at low weight are costly labour intensive structures to build. Chris’s answer is simple; go LONG and SIMPLIFY. Click to expand...

rob denney

rob denney Senior Member

catsketcher said: ↑ So I don't get the long thin tri idea anymore. A performance cat will be easier to build and have so much more usable room that these boats will only suit the single hander or a couple who love tris. Click to expand...
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brian eiland

brian eiland Senior Member

oldmulti said: ↑ The Conser 47 was originally designed as a kit catamaran but was productionised in the US. John Conser designed the boat after being involved with the Myer 44 Seabird racing cat. About 9 were built before a series of problems lost the moulds to South Africa in 2002 where they were damaged. The boat was 47 x 24.5 foot weighing 12000 lbs and displacing 15000 lbs. Click to expand...

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Boat Design Net

Building the Drifter 17 Trimaran – Interview with Mark Gumprecht

by Small Tri Guy | Aug 11, 2011 | Self-built Small Trimarans , Small Tri Info - All , Small Trimaran Audios , Trimaran Design, Rigging, Construction Info/Links | 6 comments

The Drifter 17 trimaran is a fabulous-looking craft built by Mark Gumprecht. Having previously designed, built & sailed smaller tris, Mark has spent recent months building this beauty, which features both cockpit and small cuddy cabin for camp-cruising. And it’s all set upon a platform with a LOA of just 17′.

Tom Raidna first alerted me to this brand new Drifter 17 trimaran after he published photos of Mark’s building project at BuildBoats.com . ( You’ll want to check out the full set of photos at Tom’s site ). After seeing these pics I thought it might be fun to see if Mark would let me interview him about the design/build process and record an audio of our chat.

He agreed … and you’re gonna be glad he did :-)

This interview is a real treat. We hope you enjoy it. Thanks to Tom R. for cluing me into this boat … and thanks again to Mark for taking time to let me ask some questions about this tri.

Click on the controls on the blue audio bar below and listen as Mark shares about his newest “Drifter” trimaran model, seen in the photos below. By the way, building plans for Mark’s other Drifter trimarans can be found at Duckworks .

Drifter 17 Trimaran Early Building Stages

Drifter 17 Uses Ply for Flat Surfaces and Strip Cedar for Round Edges

Drifter 17 Trimaran Taking Shape

Mark's Craftsmanship On Display

Drifter 17 Would Be Challenging for a Typical Homebuilder

Sleek Drifter 17 Trimaran Cabin Design

Drifter 17 Folding System

For French-speakers — sailor Eric Marechal (in France) sent me the following because he posted info about Mark’s Drifter 17 way before I did …

“Hi Joe, Did you check out my interviews with Mark? One about the boat: http://www.nauticaltrek.com/12518-la-construction-du-trimaran-drifter-17-gypsy-wind-par-mark-gumprecht … And one about the mast: http://www.nauticaltrek.com/12524-construction-d-un-mat-aile-en-contreplaque-pour-le-trimaran-drifter17-de-mark-gumprecht Both are in French. Alas, but with a lot of pictures. Eric

Joe.. I’m translating the mast interview. Then on the interview site, there is a lot of debate if it is wort the labour and cost not to buy directly a carbon mast (cost per pound reduction i.e.).

I cannot understand this speculation, very much, given a mast like this will not cot much more than perhaps 200 USD, nothing comparable to an aluminum new mast, not to mention a carbon fiber one. I would only make sure there is absolutely no way in for freshwater or your oume plywood is very likely to rot and leave you in a very sad condition. I’d personally rather experiment with shorter masts, galvanised carbon steel vs stainless, and synthetic rigging to reduce weight.

What a tantalizing little craft!! Has this thing hit the water yet? I would love to see some pics/video. Who would have thought that you could fit a small cabin on a 17 footer! Could a higher performance rig (perhaps something poached from the H18) stand atop this? I like the idea of using Hobie rigs as all the parts are out there and cheap.

wonderful looking boat! thanks for sharing.

Gypsy Wind was launched ! http://www.nauticaltrek.com/12552-les-essais-du-drifter-17-gypsy-wind-de-mark-gumprecht

I would like to have the plan for the Drifter 17 Trimaran. Would you be able to help me link up with the owner? Thank you.

Hi Lee, See this post regarding Drifter 17 building plans – http://smalltrimaran.co.uk/?p=7027

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Drifter 16 Free Plans

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Drifter 16 Free Plans

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Description

Additional information.

To download these plans, click HERE

--Mark Gumprecht, designer

Basic Materials list

  • 12 sheets 1/8" mahogany plywood
  • 8 1/2" x 1/2" x 13' stringers ( spruce or fir )
  • 4 5/8" x 1 1/2" x 16' stringers
  • 2 5/8" x 1" x 16' stringers
  • 3/4" spruce or fir for rudder and leeboard (can be glued together out of strips)
  • 3 2" x 5" x 11' 6" medium density spruce or fir for beams
  • 3 1/2 gallons of epoxy
  • 20 yds 50" 4 oz. fiberglass
  • 1 16' or 17' windsurfing mast

Plans consist of a single PDF file of approximately 5 megabytes. There are 62 pages of detailed instructions with 53 color photos and 12 pages of drawings.

Click HERE for more information about Drifter Trimarans

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IMAGES

  1. Drifter 14

    drifter 14 trimaran

  2. Small Homemade Drifter 14 Trimaran

    drifter 14 trimaran

  3. A duck boat: Most Used Drifter trimaran plans

    drifter 14 trimaran

  4. WKP: Choice Drifter trimaran plans

    drifter 14 trimaran

  5. A duck boat: Most Used Drifter trimaran plans

    drifter 14 trimaran

  6. A duck boat: Most Used Drifter trimaran plans

    drifter 14 trimaran

VIDEO

  1. Bug (6/10) Movie CLIP

  2. Matt Darey

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  4. Bike Helmets & Accessories AXOR, SMK, VEGA, STUDDS,STEELBIRD

  5. Street Drift en BMW M5

  6. 2000 Lockwood Aircraft Drifter GM145

COMMENTS

  1. Small Homemade Drifter 14 Trimaran

    Maiden voyage of my recently finished Trimaran, a Drifter14 by Mark Gumprecht. Free plans at Duckworks.comEasy to sail, pretty fast, even when fully loaded w...

  2. Drifter 14 Free Plans

    The Drifter 14 is a small trimaran that can be paddled or sailed with a simple rig using a windsurfing mast. The sail rolls up, and is reefable to any size in seconds. The boat is steered with rudder pedals, so your hands are always free. It takes about 15 minutes to assemble, and can be car topped, or carried on a small trailer.

  3. Small homemade Trimaran

    home built Drifter 14 Trimaran, Design by Mark Gumprecht, Impressions of a 3-day-trip in Netherlands.

  4. Duckworks

    The Drifter trimarans are sort of a modern version of the outrigger canoe, being designed to be paddled or sailed. There are some boats out there like this, mostly small tris that use kayaks for the main hull. ... There is the Drifter 12, the Drifter 12L, which has longer amas, and a taller mast, the Drifter 14, and the Drifter 16, which is an ...

  5. DRIFTER 14 two

    Introduction to the Drifter 14 The Drifter 14 is a small trimaran that can be paddled or sailed with a simple rig using a windsurfing mast. The sail rolls up, and is reefable to any size in seconds. The boat is ... The Drifter 14 is great for exploring rivers, bays, and lakes, and is easy to build out of plywood, weighing about 120 lbs when ...

  6. Plans & Kits

    To download these plans, click HERE The Drifter 14 is a small trimaran that can be paddled or sailed with a simple rig using a windsurfing mast. The sail rolls up, and is reefable to any size in seconds. The boat is steered with rudder pedals, so your...

  7. Duckworks

    Here's a short vid of the maiden voyage with my recently finished drifter 14 trimaran. Design by Mark gumprecht.

  8. More Drifter Trimaran Plans Available

    Four new trimaran building plans for: The Drifter 12, 12 L, 14, and 16 are available on The Duckworks website. The plans include building instructions with many photos. The Drifter 12 L has longer amas and a bigger rig than the 12. The Drifter 16 is a stretched version of the 14, for one or two people. The Drifter 16 is a longer version of the ...

  9. Going Places With Drifter Trimarans

    Sailor and small trimaran enthusiast Mark Gumprecht writes about a series of 4 sailboats he refers to as the "Drifter Trimarans." +(44) 01590 619315 The online community for enthusiasts of trailerable (and ... The latest boat in the series is the Drifter 14, which I built earlier this summer for my own use. It is more high performance than the ...

  10. DRIFTER 16

    DRIFTER 16 A small trimaran for paddling or sailing Designed by Mark W. Gumprecht [email protected]. DRIFTER 16 TABLE OF CONTENTS CONSTRUCTION Page Introduction 2 ... The Drifter 16 is a larger version of the Drifter 14, and is designed for one or two people. It can be paddled or sailed with a simple rig using a windsurfing mast. It can ...

  11. Duckworks

    VDOM DHTML tml>. Duckworks | Has anyone built the Drifter 14 trimaran. Has anyone built the Drifter 14 trimaran?

  12. Drifter Trimarans

    I'm a self taught carpenter, and worked on boats for many years, mostly doing custom interiors, until I built my 40' Cross trimaran in the late 1980s. I lived aboard and cruised for many years before moving to Massachusetts in 1999. I got interested in designing and building my own boats, mostly small cats and tris, including the Drifter series.

  13. Drifter Trimarans: Drifter Trimarans

    Drifter Trimarans. I just started this blog to give a little history on my Drifter Trimarans design series. It all started with a friend of mine who was looking for a special type of boat to explore the local bays and rivers where we live. Drifter 12. Paddling on the river. Posted by Mark Gumprecht at 8:48 AM.

  14. Drifter 16 Trimaran: From a Free Plan to Under Sail

    Here is small part of what, Mic D. (the builder) builder, wrote: "During the summer my son, who lives right next to me, got his girls interested in sailing. First on a Sunfish, then on a Hobie Cat 16. They moved near us in Florida in the winter. When they got here they took sailing lessons on a Catalina 31.

  15. Multihull Structure Thoughts

    Drifter trimarans are designed by Mark Gumprecht. This one is the Drifter 17 which is a small trailable cabin trimaran for bay and river cruising etc. ... The tri is a Tricat 23.5 which is 23.5 x 14.75 foot with a weight of 1300 lbs. The standard sloop rig has a 36 foot mast with a 215 square foot main and a 110 square foot jib. The final jpeg ...

  16. Drifter 12 Free Plans

    The Drifter 12 is a small trimaran that can be paddled or sailed, and is perfect for exploring rivers, bays, and lakes. The rig is simple, using a windsurfing mast. ... LOA 14.5ft - Beam 68" - Bottom 48" The Flat Head Drifter (FHD) is an enlargement of the Sol Duk Drifter(SDD) that I already have in my fleet of boats. I designed the SDD ...

  17. Can Your Trimaran Do This?

    Launching my newest trimaran takes well under 5 minutes -- more like 2 minutes! Just push it off the trailer, point it out to sea, hop in, deploy the amas, a...

  18. DRIFTER 17

    As with the CORTEZ 16, this boat has it origins with an earlier design called the SUN DOWNER 16, though deck, coachroof, and keel, were significantly changed. LOD: 17.12ft Thanks to Tony Davis for providing updated information.

  19. Building the Drifter 17 Trimaran

    The Drifter 17 trimaran is a fabulous-looking craft built by Mark Gumprecht. Having previously designed, built & sailed smaller tris, Mark has spent recent months building this beauty, which features both cockpit and small cuddy cabin for camp-cruising. And it's all set upon a platform with a LOA of just 17'. Tom Raidna first alerted

  20. Drifter 16 Free Plans

    3 1/2 gallons of epoxy. 20 yds 50" 4 oz. fiberglass. 1 16' or 17' windsurfing mast. Plans consist of a single PDF file of approximately 5 megabytes. There are 62 pages of detailed instructions with 53 color photos and 12 pages of drawings. Click HERE for more information about Drifter Trimarans. To download these plans, click HERE.

  21. My New Boat

    This trimaran was designed and built by Mark Gumprecht.http://smalltrimarans.com/blog/summer-sailing-in-a-trimaran-called-gypsy-wind/#more-9446When I first s...

  22. Drifter 17 Trimaran

    Apologies for the poor audio. It was quite windy, with an apparent wind speed approaching 25 mph and better at times. I also had the camera in its waterproof...