Twister_Ken
Well-Known Member
Original thread, somewhere below (or maybe above, later) got me thinking.
Most of my racing was done on a Swan 411. If we could her going upwind at more than 7 knots, we were pleased, 7 and a quarter brought smiles all round. 7 and a half, never achieved, and only rarely seen off the wind except surfing bigguns.
My current boat matches those upwind speeds without effort or constant trimming and tweaking, and often gets to 8 and a bit reaching or running even without a hatful of wind and a coloured sail.
I compared the dimensions. The 411, BTW is an S&S design, so no slouch on that front and we used to be competitive in class one.
A striking difference is the LOA/LWL.
Swan 411 LOA 12.44m. LWL 10.23m, B 3.64
Arcona 340. LOA 10.40m, LWL 9.30, B 3.45.
So over two metres more boat LOA, but less than a metre LWL.
The sail area - overall - shows a huge 'advantage' to the Swan. Main 33 sqm and genoa 72.1 sqm, so 105.1 overall
The Arcona has a much more modern sail plan, big main, small genoa. Main 37.8 sqm, genoa 41 sqm, for 78.8 overall
However in anything over about 15kts apparent upwind, the Swan's number one genoa would come off to be replaced by a number three spitfire jib - sorry don't know the size – so it would lose sail area as soon as the breeze piped up.
The Arcona will carry full sail up to about 22 kts apparent upwind, mainly because the main can be flattened out using mast bend and other bits of string.
Consequently the actual sail area difference would, in many conditions, be rather less than the headline figures.
Weight is the other shocker. Yes, the Swan was built like a brick outhouse. 10.8 tonnes design weight. My Arcona weighs in at less than half that, empty. (OK, I know it's no so big, but it has the same accommodation, minus one berth in the after cabin. FYI, the Arcona 410 - same LOA as the 411, weighs in at 7.8 tonnes, 3 tonnes lighter, and is no stripped-out racer)
Minimum comfortable cruising crew for the Swan was four fit people - that gear was heavy. On the Arcona, 2 people, slightly crumbly.
The Swan was a state of the art cruiser/racer, design date 1977. The Arcona, ditto, design date 2009.
No doubt a modern Swan (if they still make one that small?) would be more or less a match for the equivalent Arcona - and other cruiser/racer builders - current models. It's the progress that I find interesting.
Well done, designers (and builders).
Most of my racing was done on a Swan 411. If we could her going upwind at more than 7 knots, we were pleased, 7 and a quarter brought smiles all round. 7 and a half, never achieved, and only rarely seen off the wind except surfing bigguns.
My current boat matches those upwind speeds without effort or constant trimming and tweaking, and often gets to 8 and a bit reaching or running even without a hatful of wind and a coloured sail.
I compared the dimensions. The 411, BTW is an S&S design, so no slouch on that front and we used to be competitive in class one.
A striking difference is the LOA/LWL.
Swan 411 LOA 12.44m. LWL 10.23m, B 3.64
Arcona 340. LOA 10.40m, LWL 9.30, B 3.45.
So over two metres more boat LOA, but less than a metre LWL.
The sail area - overall - shows a huge 'advantage' to the Swan. Main 33 sqm and genoa 72.1 sqm, so 105.1 overall
The Arcona has a much more modern sail plan, big main, small genoa. Main 37.8 sqm, genoa 41 sqm, for 78.8 overall
However in anything over about 15kts apparent upwind, the Swan's number one genoa would come off to be replaced by a number three spitfire jib - sorry don't know the size – so it would lose sail area as soon as the breeze piped up.
The Arcona will carry full sail up to about 22 kts apparent upwind, mainly because the main can be flattened out using mast bend and other bits of string.
Consequently the actual sail area difference would, in many conditions, be rather less than the headline figures.
Weight is the other shocker. Yes, the Swan was built like a brick outhouse. 10.8 tonnes design weight. My Arcona weighs in at less than half that, empty. (OK, I know it's no so big, but it has the same accommodation, minus one berth in the after cabin. FYI, the Arcona 410 - same LOA as the 411, weighs in at 7.8 tonnes, 3 tonnes lighter, and is no stripped-out racer)
Minimum comfortable cruising crew for the Swan was four fit people - that gear was heavy. On the Arcona, 2 people, slightly crumbly.
The Swan was a state of the art cruiser/racer, design date 1977. The Arcona, ditto, design date 2009.
No doubt a modern Swan (if they still make one that small?) would be more or less a match for the equivalent Arcona - and other cruiser/racer builders - current models. It's the progress that I find interesting.
Well done, designers (and builders).