Hylas Yachts

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HYLAS YACHTS HYLAS YACHTS.jpg
HYLAS YACHTS

Hylas Yachts is a brand of fiberglass, center-cockpit sailboats and luxury power yachts built in Taiwan by Queen Long Marine Ltd and designed by Sparkman & Stephens, German Frers, Bill Dixon and Salthouse of New Zealand. Sizes range from 42 to 70 feet. Joseph Huang, the president of Queen Long Marine, introduced the brand in 1984. [1]

Contents

The evolution of the Hylas brand is worthy of note and a testament to the willingness to listen to customers and forge strong ties with world class designers. This has led to the latest in the series of Hylas Sailing Yachts under construction today. Adopting new production techniques and focusing on ease of handling, luxury and sea-keeping ability the Germán Frers designed Hylas 60 and Bill Dixon designed Hylas 57 & Hylas 48 are the very latest. Recent years have also seen Queen Long Marine make their debut in the Power Yacht Market with the Hylas M44 & M49. The move to power yacht building is a direct reflection on market forces as power becomes more popular. Targeting the discerning yachtsperson the M44 has the popular "down-east" styling. Is easily managed when short handed and focuses heavily on bright and open social spaces.

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HYLAS SAILING YACHTS LINE
HYLAS POWER YACHTS LINE HYLAS POWER YACHTS.png
HYLAS POWER YACHTS LINE

History

In the early 1980s, Joseph Huang of Queen Long Marine Ltd. partnered with Sparkman & Stephens to build a 47 foot sailboat called the Stevens 47. They named her after Bill Stevens of Stevens Yacht Charters because he ordered so many of the original boats. [2] In 1984, Huang added two German Frers designs of 42 and 44 feet. He branded them Hylas after a Greek mythological youth associated with Hercules and the cruise of the Argonauts. [1]

The Stevens 47 and Hylas 44 foot versions were popular charter sailboats. Along with Bill Stevens, Caribbean Yachts Charters (CYC) under Dick Jachney ran a charter fleet of 44 and 47 Hylases. [1] Jachney split the cost of new Hylas Yachts with private owners in exchange for using their boat in the CYC fleet for a couple years. [3] This allowed the owner to save considerably on a new Hylas. [3] While a former charter boat could have been refitted, in general these are poorly outfitted for cruising and have high engine hours. [2] The presence of high engine hours on chartered Hylas 44's is especially troubling because of the difficulty of repowering. [4] In 1990, Joseph Huang and Dick Jachney joined forces and redesigned the 44 and 47 adding sugar scoop sterns into eventually the 46 and 49 versions. [5] These 46 and 49 Hylases became the mainstay of the CYC fleet. [1]

Around 1998, Hylas introduced a German Frers 54-foot model. [6] In 2000, they introduced a raised saloon model of the same 54-foot Frers hull design. During this period, Hylas cut ties with CYC and became unaffiliated with any charter boat operation. [6] During the 2005 Caribbean 1500 rally from Virginia to the British Virgin Islands, two 54 Hylases lost substantial portions of their rudders. The lower third of the rudders which was all foam and unattached to the partial skeg broke away under the high stress. [6] These failures were later attributed to groundings prior to the passages. More recently, Hylas introduced a 63-foot Frers design which has been extended to 70 feet. In 2010, they introduced the 56 Frers, an extended version of the 54.

Models

Hylas Sailing Yachts line offers H46, H48, H49, H56, H57, H60, H63 and H70 foot designs. The Hylas Power Yachts line M44 and M49. The H49 is a Tony Seifert modified version of the original Sparkman & Stephens designed 47-footer. All others are by German Frers and Bill Dixon. Hylas is famous for center cockpits with teak interiors and large aft staterooms. Specifically, they carry beams further aft than most other yachts. Queen Long Marine in Kaohsiung, Taiwan is the sole builder of Hylas Yachts. For the H56 and H70 foot models, they use Twaron, a Kevlar like aramid fiber. Twaron makes a hull reportedly as strong as a metal one. Hylas boasts that the fiber makes their yachts bulletproof.

ModelDesignerNotes
70German FrersCurrently in production, comes in centerboard or fixed keel, has centerline queens forward/aft with 2 staterooms midships
66German FrersOut of production, rare [1]
56German FrersIntroduced in 2009 and in production. Extended version of 54. Likewise comes in standard or raised saloon deck molds.
Hylas 54 standard.jpg 54German FrersComes in standard and raised saloon versions. The RS has a higher sole in the saloon with enlarged windows on cabin trunk compared to standard 54.
Hylas 51.jpg 51German FrersOut of production, rare [1]
Hylas 49.jpg 49Sparkman & Stephens, Tony SeifertIn production, elongated version of 47 with sugar scoop stern, higher freeboard, enlarged cockpit [5]
Hylas 47.jpg 47Sparkman & StephensOut of production, first of Hylas models, originally branded Stevens 47 [5]
Hylas 46.jpg 46German FrersIn production, extended version of 44/45.5 with integrated sugar scoop stern and head forward with portside offset forward pullman berth [3]
45.5German FrersOut of production, same hull design as the 44 with a sugar scoop stern added [1]
Hylas 44.jpg 44German FrersOut of production, arguably most successful design, succeeded by current 46 [4]
42German FrersOut of production, only aft cockpit Hylas, has an aft stateroom with centerline queen under cockpit sole [1]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Hylas Yachts Owner Association, hyoa.org, archived from the original on 2010-06-18, retrieved 2009-12-20
  2. 1 2 Kretschmer, John (2002). Used Boat Notebook. Sheridan House. p. 215–220. ISBN   1-57409-150-6.
  3. 1 2 3 Lee, Bill (January 1996). Cruising World. Beneteau. p. 98–99. ISSN   0098-3519.
  4. 1 2 Kretschmer, John (March 2009), "Hylas 44", Sailing Magazine, retrieved 2009-12-20
  5. 1 2 3 Kretschmer, John (January 1993), "Offshore-able", Sailing Magazine, pp. 36–40[ dead link ]
  6. 1 2 3 Doane, Charles J. (6 December 2009). The Modern Cruising Sailboat: A Complete Guide. McGraw Hill Professional. p. 358–359. ISBN   978-0-07-163700-8.

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