LOA:
62’
LWL: 56’ 1 ¼"
Beam: 16’ 3 ¾"
Draft Range: 8’ to 14’
Displacement (estimated): 44,785 lbs
Fin: 3,638 lbs
Bulb: 15,338 lbs
Upwind sail area: 2310 sq ft
Downwind sail area: 4850 sq ftLaunched August 2006, this
light-weight, custom racer-cruiser is
something that we had wanted to build for many years. With our continuing
advancements in technology, we are one of the few that have mastered the
SCRIMP process using carbon fiber and epoxy and we were ready for this
fantastic craft. Designed by the innovative west coast firm
Reichel/Pugh, BARAKA is capable
of going anywhere fast.
A truly modern cruising boat, BARAKA is equipped with an elaborate
hydraulic system set up for shorthanded sailing so her owner can take her
on extended cruises by himself or with a very small crew. Her luxurious
interior includes two guest cabins under the large cockpit, great galley
and main salon, and a large forward owner's cabin.
This boat has all the systems that one would expect in a custom
cruising sailboat, but with an ever present eye on weight. The hull mold
was cut by Janicki's C&C router in Seattle and shipped to us in Maine.
Her construction of a carbon fiber composite using Corecell infused with
epoxy resin made this an exciting project. Infusing the carbon and Corecell composite solves many of the problems the very light and
thin-skinned boats are having. The epoxy adds the resin strength that a
thin-skin needs. The infusing process provides a direct link between inner
and outer skins and no air in the laminate. Normally a boat of this type
will have a stiffer Nomex core with pre-preg carbon laminate. The present
thinking is to add flexibility to the composite structure to gain some
strength when pounding up wind for long periods of time. Using Corecell, a
foam core with epoxy resin, gives us the flexibility we needed for
repeated stress without delaminating. The multi-hull sailors are proving
that thin-skins need some flexibility and we have to be careful making
skins too stiff. This has been a very exciting project for us.
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Commissioning BARAKA at our docks |
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BARAKA at twilight under full moon. |
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pictures. |