Sunfish (sailboat)

Last updated

Sunfish
Sunfishlogo.png
Class symbol
Sunfish rigged for sailing.jpg
Development
DesignerAlcort, Inc.
Year1953
Design One-Design
NameSunfish
Boat
Crew1–2
Draft 2 feet 11 inches (0.89 m)
Hull
Type Monohull
Construction Fiberglass
Hull weight120 pounds (54 kg)
LOA 13 feet 9 inches (4.19 m) [1]
Beam 4 feet 1 inch (1.24 m)
Hull appendages
Keel/board type Daggerboard
Rig
Rig typeOceanic lateen (crab claw sail)
Sails
Mainsail area75 square feet (7.0 m2)
Total sail area75 square feet (7.0 m2)
Racing
D-PN 99.6

The Sunfish is a personal-size, beach-launched sailing dinghy. It features a very flat, boardlike hull carrying an Oceanic lateen sail mounted to an un-stayed mast.

Contents

Sunfish was developed by Alcort, Inc. and first appeared around 1952 as the "next generation" improvement on their original boat, the Sailfish. In contrast, the Sunfish has a wider beam for more stability, increased freeboard and the addition of a foot-well for a more comfortable sailing position. Sunfish began as a wood hull design and progressed to fiberglass construction just a few years after its introduction. [2]

Having a Lateen sail with its simple two line rigging makes a Sunfish simple to learn sailing on and to set up. Upgrades can be added to enhance sail control for competitive sailing, [3] making the boat attractive to both novice and experienced sailors alike.

Due to the broad appeal of the Sunfish, in 1995 it was commended by The American Sailboat Hall of Fame for being "the most popular fiberglass boat ever designed, with a quarter million sold worldwide" (at that point in time). [4]

Early in 2016, manufacturer Laser Performance moved production from Portsmouth, Rhode Island, US [5] to China [6] and boats were supplied to the 2016 World Championships.

In 2017, Laser Performance (LP) announced the creation of a new governing body to manage the Sunfish Class, the International Sunfish Class Organization (ISCO), after the International Sunfish Class Association (ISCA), governing body since 1969, refused to sign a trademark agreement. In response the ISCA, still the World Sailing recognised Class Association, have announced rule changes which permit alternative suppliers to Laser Performance for some components. [7]

Today, the Sunfish brand-name has become so widely known it is often misapplied generically to refer to any brand of board-style boat sporting the characteristic crab claw sail. [8] The design is currently manufactured by Laser Performance.

Design

The distinctive low-aspect ratio Lateen sail gives the Sunfish an anachronistic appearance compared with today's more familiar high-aspect ratio Bermuda rig sailboats. However, this sail plan is not as old-world as it might first appear. Using a lateen rig for this style boat shifts the advantage toward better performance in lighter air (less than 4 on the Beaufort scale) and contributes to it having good down-wind characteristics.

The hull’s very mild "V" bottom and hard chine make Sunfish a most stable boat for its size, along with enabling it to sail on a plane (hydroplane). Planing allows the boat to achieve a speed greater than theoretical hull speed based on length at waterline (LWL). Having a down-wind performance advantage helps the Sunfish to achieve a planing attitude at lower wind speeds than its high-aspect ratio sail plan counterparts.

Designed as a water-tight, hollow-body pontoon, a hull like the Sunfish is sometimes referred to as "self-rescuing" because the boat can be capsized and its cockpit swamped without threat of the boat sinking.

History

Sunfish Sailboat (Niagara River, Buffalo, New York; 1970) SunfishSailboat-NiagaraRiverBfloNY-1970-DrDennisBogdan.jpg
Sunfish Sailboat (Niagara River, Buffalo, New York; 1970)
Children learning to sail in Dunewood, New York Sunfish Lessons.jpg
Children learning to sail in Dunewood, New York

Beginnings of Alcort, Inc.

In 1945, Alex Bryan and Cortlandt Heyniger created the Alcort company to produce their first boat design, the Sailfish. Originally framing carpenters by trade, these two entrepreneurs began their sailcraft endeavors building iceboats as a sideline. A proposal to build a lifesaving paddleboard for the Red Cross came their way. They determined the concept unfeasible as it stood. An improved design sporting a sailing canoe sail rig did however strike a spark as a possible profit making venture. From that humble beginning the Sailfish was born. After Bryan's wife, Aileen Bryan suggested a boat with a small cockpit where she could put her feet, the design was updated to the Sunfish. [9] [10]

Sunfish (wooden; 1953) 1953 wooden Sunfish sailboat.jpg
Sunfish (wooden; 1953)

The kit boat niche

The first Sailfish were offered in the form of detailed drawings for the backyard builder or as a finished, ready-to-sail boat, built by the Alcort shop. In the course of growing their business, Cortlandt and Alex had the revelation to kit the boat by supplying pre-cut pieces, all the necessary fittings, and inclusion of the sail thereby making backyard construction more appealing to an even wider range of would-be boat builders. Sunfish first appeared as either a DIY kit or a finished boat. Of the two designs, only the Sailfish was originally a blueprint plan boat.

Waypoints

  1. One-Design Sunfish racing remains a "manufacturer's Class" for mutual support and true to all one-on-one style racing, competing boats must conform to One Design and Class Rules [14] in order to qualify to race in sanctioned events. Recreational use boats may be modified as the owner chooses and need not conform to anything more than the local boating safety regulations in effect where the boat is sailed.

Sunfish Builder Chronology

1952–1969 Alcort, Inc. (founded 1945)
1969–1986 AMF
1986–1988 Loveless & DeGarmo, dba, Alcort Sailboats Inc.
1988–1991 Pearson Yacht Co.
1991–1997 Sunfish/Laser, Inc.
1997–2007 Vanguard
2007– Laser Performance [17]

Sunfish in racing

A race rigged Sunfish racing on Irondequoit Bay, NY. The racing setup seen in these photos shows the sail closer to the deck than the typical recreational rigging would be. SunfishRacing.jpg
A race rigged Sunfish racing on Irondequoit Bay, NY. The racing setup seen in these photos shows the sail closer to the deck than the typical recreational rigging would be.

For most One-Design Class eligible boats, the number of boats built and the number of boats registered in the racing class are closely related. This makes the boat and the racing Class practically one and the same. The Sunfish is an anomaly to this more familiar symbiotic relationship.

The Sunfish Class Association reported in 2001, Sunfish production had exceeded 300,000 boats. [18] The registrar for One Design sailing in the United States, US Sailing, reported in a 2004 survey, Sunfish Class membership numbered 1,573. This does not mean Sunfish isn’t a preferred race boat. On the contrary, at 1,573 Class members, Sunfish ranks in the upper percentile of boats involved with organized racing in the U.S. [19] It does, however, demonstrate the boat’s above average versatility to suit a broader range of sailing applications.

Fun racing

Recreational, "friendly competition" played a key role in establishing the renowned popularity of the Alcort boat designs. [16] [20] Events of past and present, such as the Connecticut River race, [21] Seattle's Duck Dodge, [22] and the Hampton Roads Sunfish Challenge & Dinghy Distance Race, now in its 10th year, [23] serve as examples of the sort of fun Sunfish sailors have without getting too serious.

Open Class Racing

Sunfish sailors who are more serious about sailing competitions, but who do not have the advantage of a nearby Sunfish fleet, can race their boat against nearly any other make and model of sailboat in "Open Class" events using a handicap system. Sunfish have a base-line Portsmouth handicap of 99.6. [24]

One-Design Racing (ISCA)

One Design racing uses nearly identical boats so the competition is based purely on sailing skill. One Design Classes are watched over by a governing body who assure conformity. [lower-alpha 1]

The International Sunfish Class Association – development [18]
  • In 1969 AMF was instrumental in forming the Sunfish (racing) Class Association.
  • In 1984 the Sunfish Class became recognized by the International Yacht Racing Union,
today known as the International Sailing Federation (ISAF).
  • A year later the Sunfish Class went independent as the International Sunfish Class Association (ISCA) [3]
  • Sunfish gained Pan American Games status in 1999 and has maintained recognition in following years
  • International Masters was held outside the United States, in the Netherlands, for the first time in 2005.
  • There are three continental and nine national championships regularly.
  • Sunfish fleets are active in 28 countries around the globe.
  1. ISCA Racing is in accordance with the Sunfish Class Rule Book [14] and ISAF Racing Rules of Sailing (RRS).

Sunfish 60th Anniversary

To celebrate 60 years of Sunfish, current builder Laser Performance designed a 60th Anniversary edition of the Sunfish to celebrate the diverse history of the boat and the sailors that love it. LaserPerformance also hosted a Sunfish 60th Anniversary Celebration at Noyes Pond in Massachusetts, the home of Sunfish designer Al Bryan, that gathered over 100 people sailing old and new Sunfish. [25]

Super Sunfish

Super Sunfish
Super Sunfish Shinnecock Bay.jpg
Launching a Super Sunfish on Shinnecock Bay
Development
DesignerJohn Black Lee / AMF
Year1974 (production version)
Design Development Class
NameSuper Sunfish
Boat
Crew1–2
Hull
Type Monohull
Construction Fiberglass
Hull weight129 pounds (59 kg)
LOA 13 feet 10 inches (4.22 m) [26]
Beam 4 feet 1 inch (1.24 m)
Hull appendages
Keel/board type Daggerboard
Rig
Rig type Bermuda rig
Sails
Mainsail area65 square feet (6.0 m2)
Racing
D-PN 100.7

In the 1960s, a member of the New Canaan, Conn. Sunfish Fleet, John Black Lee, independently experimented with a conventional sail rig for the Sunfish. He developed a high-aspect ratio sail that worked on the Sunfish hull and christened his design the Formula S. The high aspect ratio sail plan has better upwind performance characteristics over the lateen sail, changing the boat's handling to point more like other Bermuda rig sailboats in its size. With this configuration, complexity of sail control is elevated by the addition of dynamic outhaul, downhaul, and mainsheet traveller lines.

Lee's concept didn't interest Alcort, Inc. as a production model so he refit conversion boats independently and sparked organization of Formula S fleets. A few years after their 1969 purchase of Alcort, Inc., AMF revisited the idea of a high aspect ratio rig for the Sunfish. AMF did not choose to adopt Lee's Formula S design, they did however, develop their own variation calling it the Super Sunfish. The existing Formula S fleet eventually became assimilated into the ranks of AMF Super Sunfish fleets.

The Super Sunfish was available from 1974 to 1984. AMF marketed this more conventional sail plan as a performance version of the Sunfish in an attempt to compete with, among others, the newly emerging Laser. Portsmouth handicap numbers, however, place the Laser slightly faster. With its hard chine hull, the Super Sunfish is the more stable boat so it's a tradeoff between the two designs.

The Super Sunfish was offered as a complete package and as a kit to retrofit existing lateen rigged Sunfish. The literature points out the sail systems can be easily swapped on a single Sunfish hull to accommodate different sailors' preferences. [9]

NORTH AMERICAN PORTSMOUTH NUMBERS [27]
CENTERBOARD CLASSUSSA CODEDPNBN 0-1BN 2-3BN 4BN 5-9
SunfishSF99.6102.9100.397.795.6
Super SunfishSSF100.7102.4102.399.3(95.8)

Events

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Albacore (dinghy)</span> Two-person dinghy for competitive racing

The Albacore is a 4.57 m (15 ft) two-person planing dinghy with fractional sloop rig, for competitive racing and lake and near-inshore day sailing. Hulls are made of either wood or fiberglass. The basic shape was developed in 1954 from an Uffa Fox design, the Swordfish. Recent boats retain the same classic dimensions, and use modern materials and modern control systems.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laser (dinghy)</span> Sailboat class

The Laser is a class of single-handed, one-design sailing dinghies using a common hull design with three interchangeable rigs of different sail areas, appropriate to a given combination of wind strength and crew weight. Ian Bruce and Bruce Kirby designed the Laser in 1970 with an emphasis on simplicity and performance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Flying Scot (dinghy)</span> Sailboat class

The Flying Scot is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Sandy Douglass as a one-design racer and first built in 1958.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thistle (dinghy)</span> Sailboat class

The Thistle is an American planing sailing dinghy that was designed by Sandy Douglass as a one-design racer and first built in 1945.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laser 4.7</span>

The Laser 4.7 or ILCA 4 is a one-design dinghy class in the Laser series and is a one-design class of sailboat. All Lasers are built to the same specifications. The Laser is 4.06 m long, with a waterline length of 3.81 m. The hull weight is 59 kg (130 lb). The boat is manufactured by ILCA and World Sailing approved builders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jet 14</span> Sailboat class

The Jet 14 is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Howard Siddons as a one-design racer and first built in 1952.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Day Sailer</span>

The Day Sailer is a day sailer for pleasure sailing as well as racing; it is sailed throughout North America and Brazil. Designed by Uffa Fox and George O'Day in 1958, the Day Sailer possesses a 6-foot beam, an overall length of 17 feet, a fiberglass hull and a cuddy cabin. It is able to sleep two. The sloop rig includes mainsail, jib and a spinnaker on an aluminum mast and boom.

The Rhodes 19 is an American trailerable day sailer or sailing dinghy, that was designed by Philip Rhodes as a one-design racer and first built in 1958.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Force 5</span>

The Force 5 is a small one-design racing sailboat that is similar to the more well known Laser but with a hard chine aft. Although it is designed for single-handed racing, two people can easily fit into the large cockpit. The boats are currently built in Long Island, New York by Weeks Yacht Yard.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Penguin (dinghy)</span> Sailboat class

The Penguin is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Philip Rhodes in 1933 as a one design racer for frostbite racing on the US east coast and first built in 1939.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Banshee (dinghy)</span> Sailboat class

The Banshee, sometimes called the Banshee 13, is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Richard L. Reid as a one-design racer and first built in 1969.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sailfish (sailboat)</span>

The Sailfish sailboat is a small, hollow body, board-boat style sailing dinghy. The design is a shallow draft, sit-upon hull carrying a crab claw sail mounted to an un-stayed mast. This style sailboat is sometimes referred to as a "wet boat" because, with its minimal freeboard, the sailor often gets splashed by spray as the boat moves across the water. This flat top was known in some coves as the "ironing board of the ocean."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Snowbird (sailboat)</span> Sailboat class

The Snowbird is an American sailboat that was initially designed by Willis Reid as a one design racer and first built in 1921. The boat was re-designed by Edson B. Schock in the 1940s and it became a popular junior class.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LaserPerformance</span> Sailboat manufacturer

LaserPerformance is an Anglo-American dinghy manufacturer. LaserPerformance manufactures many sailboats including: Laser, Sunfish, Bug, Laser Vago, Laser Bahia, Club FJ, Club 420, Z420, Vanguard 15, Dart 16, Funboat and Optimists.

The Geary 18 is an American sailboat that was designed by Ted Geary as a one-design racer and first built in 1926.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hobie 14</span> Sailboat class

The Hobie 14 is an American catamaran sailing dinghy that was designed by Hobie Alter and first built in 1967.

The Phantom 14 is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Jack Howie as a racer and first built in 1977. It is a board sailboat, similar to the Sunfish.

The Dolphin 15 Senior, sometimes referred to as just the Dolphin Senior, is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by brothers Glenn Corcoran and Murray Corcoran and first built in 1964.

The AMF Apollo 16 is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Canadian Bruce Kirby as a one-design racer and first built in 1977.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hampton One-Design</span> Sailboat class

The Hampton One-Design is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Vincent Serio as a one-design racer and first built in 1934.

References

  1. "Sunfish: Specs". LaserPerformance. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  2. White, Will (1996). "Background on the Boat". The Sunfish Bible. Sarasota, Florida: Omega3 Press. ISBN   0-9654005-0-6.
  3. 1 2 3 "International Sunfish Class Association". www.sunfishclass.org.
  4. "Sunfish". American Sailboat Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on January 26, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  5. "LaserPerformance Open's its Doors to the Public for the First Time". SailingForums.com. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  6. Patin, Paul-Jon. "Update from Class President Paul-Jon Patin". International Sunfish Class Association. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  7. "LaserPerformance versus Sunfish Class". Scuttlebutt Sailing News. Inbox Communications, Inc. November 7, 2017. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  8. Clonefish article – other brands of boats commonly misperceived of as Sunfish
  9. 1 2 The Sunfish Bible by Will White, Omega3 Press, Sarasota, FL – "Background on the Boat"
  10. S.I. Staff (September 20, 1982). "HERE SHE IS, THE TRUE LOVE BOAT". Sports Illustrated Vault | SI.com. Retrieved November 7, 2021.
  11. Sunfish Sales Brochure – 1968
  12. White, Will (1969). The Sunfish bible. Sarasota, Florida: Omega Cubed Press. ISBN   9780965400503.
  13. "The Sunfish Forum". SailingForums.com. Full Brightness Studios.
  14. 1 2 "ISCA Class Rule Book" (PDF).
  15. ITW Plexus- Marine Adhesive
  16. 1 2 "American Sailboat Hall of Fame". Archived from the original on January 26, 2007.
  17. "U.S.Coast Guard Manufacturers Identification Code (MIC) database". Archived from the original on October 4, 2012.
  18. 1 2 "Sunfish Class History".
  19. "US Sailing".
  20. LIFE Magazine – Volume 27, Number 7, August 15, 1949 – "World's Wettest, Sportiest Boat"
  21. The Sunfish Bible (New - Revised 1996) by Will White, Omega3 Press, Sarasota, FL - "River Racing"
  22. Duck Dodge Fun Regatta
  23. "HOME | sunfish-challenge". Archived from the original on February 13, 2021. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  24. "Centerboard Portsmouth Numbers". Archived from the original on August 16, 2012.
  25. "Sunfish 60th Anniversary Celebration". Eventbrite. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  26. Super Sunfish Specifications – AMF Catalog – Fun of Sailing - 1978
  27. Centerboard Portsmouth Numbers Archived August 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine and Wind Dependent Handicaps - Centerboard Classes