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Salcombe Yawl
Type of sailing dinghy
Type of sailing dinghy
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Salcombe Yawl |
| image | Salcombe Yawl 1967.png |
| imagesize | 220 |
| caption | A Salcombe Yawl, reefed, crewed by teenagers on the Kingsbridge Estuary in 1967 |
| crew | 2-3 |
| type | Monohull |
| rig | Ketch |
| loa | 4.88 m |
| beam | 2.13 m |
| hull | 381 kg |
| sailarea | 16.24 m2 |
| year | 1938 |
| location | Salcombe, Devon |
|d-pn = |rya-pn =
The term Salcombe Yawl refers to a small sailing dinghy restricted class native to Salcombe in South Devon, and also to the traditional sailing vessel from the area upon which that class was based, with a 200-year history. The current class of vessel has about the size of a Merlin Rocket, that is 4.88 m and about 180 have been built of which 80% are still in use. It is built traditionally by hand from mahogany, and is clinker built. The centre plate is cast iron, but more recent Yawls have bronze plates. While it is rigged as a ketch with the mizzen ahead of the rudder post, the label yawl is probably derived from a corruption of the word yole, meaning a small inshore fishing boat. Designers, work within the class restrictions, adding innovations to each vessel. It is raced in two classes depending on the age of the boat. A newly built boat in 2009 would cost £40,000 while a second hand vessel would be half of that. There is a glassfibre derivative with aluminium spars called a Devon Yawl. The mould for this was taken from a 1968 Salcombe Yawl and because of the nature of its construction is a one-design. There are approximately 300 Devon Yawls and they are built both in the UK and USA.
References
References
- "Noble Marine Insurance".
- "Salcombe Yawl history".
- "Meeting at Salcombe, Saturday 4th November 2000". South West Maritime History association.
- "July 2008 - Yawl sailing in Salcombe". Donkin on Sailing.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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