lpdsn
Well-Known Member
A classic is a boat that has gone right through the MAB stage and has subsequently had a fortune spent on it.
All depends on perspective. A few years ago a Huntsman was an old past it wooden mobo, but is it classic now?
I think a well built boat that has nice lines, has a place in marine history and is remembered with fondness by many former owners, is or will be considered a classic weather it has sails/wooden hull or not.
Aah Yes, that's a classic to you though....your definition.
My mini didn't have any hemp ropes, gaff rig or even an anchor and it floated my teenage boat!
If we are talking Cars My first was a "Classic" a Ford Classic I had it for 12 years 1961 to 1973 did just about everything you could to the engine at one point it could have been taken out and dropped straight into a F1.
It was good for over 145 at it's best. loved blowing Lotus's off on the Preston bypass.
The only trouble was I kept blowing it up.
I did over 200,000 miles in it.
How about...
1: out of production for 30 years
2: having an active owners association
3: has completed transatlantic voyage
From our separate Yachtsnet web page where we list yachts for sale we consider "classic" :-
The definition of a “classic yacht” is a fairly elastic one. Few would argue that a J-class from the 1920s is a classic yacht. What about a James Silver “gentlemans motor yacht” from the late 1940s, or Laurent Giles’ beautiful Nicholson-built “Lutine” from 1952?
Is however a Rustler 36 (which could have been built in 2014) a classic yacht? It certainly derives it’s pedigree and hull form from the 1942 Folkboat, which general hull form Kim Holman enlarged, refined, and progressively reworked into the Stella, Twister and then the Rustler 31 and 36 designs.
So if a 2012 Rustler 36 can be a classic yacht, can a 1971 Contessa 32? Some would say no, as this has a separate keel and skeg/rudder, instead of a traditional long keel. Yet separate keels and rudders were already well known well over a hundred years ago, Herreshoff having started to build such designs in the early 1890s. And if a 1971 Contessa 32 can be a classic design, why not also a shiny new-built one from Jeremy Rogers?
There are also yachts that started life as working boats, whether pilot cutters, fishing boats or the Colin Archer sailing lifeboats? Many such boats are still sailing at over 100 years old, though now used purely as yachts. Others were built as yachts by the same yards that built working versions, such as the Miller Fifers, or the Falmouth Working Boats, which you can still have built now in GRP either as a yacht or a working sailing oyster dredger.
Finally, there are the modern yachts which are consciously “retro” - the Spirits, Morris’ and other beautiful yachts in modern materials. The new Rustler 33 is very much in this mould.
We believe in a fairly flexible definition of the term classic yacht, in much the same way that some quite modern cars, and cars that were quite commonplace in their day, can now be called classic cars. We are happy for a classic yacht to be built of any material, as long as she is beautiful in her own way, and suited to her purpose, be it cruising or racing.
If you are thinking of selling a classic yacht our system of lots of really high quality high resolution photographs and full details really does encourage buyers to travel to view. Call us on 01326-212234 to discuss the sale of your classic yacht.
The dictionary definition of the word “classic” is:
from the French classique, from Latin classicus, of the highest class of Roman citizens, of the first rank, from classis.
Also serving as a standard of excellence: of recognized value, traditional, enduring, eg. classic designs.
how about
1: out of production for 30 years
2:having an active owners association
3: has completed transatlantic voyage
4: being a kingfisher!
ok,ignore the last one,I thought I might get away with it!
So, my boat has been out of production for more than thirty years? Yes
She has sweet lines? Absolutely! It is said that her designer couldn't design an ugly boat if he tried.
Quality construction? You bet! She was built by Wauquiez, UP to a standard, not DOWN to a price.
Fit for the purpose? She can go anywhere and will take care of me long after I would have given up.
Does she sail well? Absolutely, even by an old single-hander.
Transoceanic voyages? Yes, numerous and including some circumnavigations.
So, is my boat a 'Classic' or not?
So, my boat has been out of production for more than thirty years? Yes
She has sweet lines? Absolutely! It is said that her designer couldn't design an ugly boat if he tried.
Quality construction? You bet! She was built by Wauquiez, UP to a standard, not DOWN to a price.
Fit for the purpose? She can go anywhere and will take care of me long after I would have given up.
Does she sail well? Absolutely, even by an old single-hander.
Transoceanic voyages? Yes, numerous and including some circumnavigations.
So, is my boat a 'Classic' or not?
I thought it was a Westerly Centaur till you mentioned the Wauquiez bit.![]()
My present one is a Wauquiez Centurion 32, built in 1973.