What catamaran should we buy?

goeasy123

Active member
Joined
10 Nov 2018
Messages
760
Visit site
We're currenlty sailing a 'proper' sail boat... Najad 400. My wife says she would be happier on a cat. So, to keep the dream alive I'm considering a switch to a liveaboard cat for two. I.e. not a preformance cat, something that will carry a bit of weight, not one of those production boats that fall apart after a few years and not too old. What's the current thinking on good candidates?
 

shan

Well-known member
Joined
14 Apr 2014
Messages
14,970
Location
East Algarve
Visit site
We're currenlty sailing a 'proper' sail boat... Najad 400. My wife says she would be happier on a cat. So, to keep the dream alive I'm considering a switch to a liveaboard cat for two. I.e. not a preformance cat, something that will carry a bit of weight, not one of those production boats that fall apart after a few years and not too old. What's the current thinking on good candidates?
Have you both spent some time on a Cat because I had the same view, right until I did spend some time on one. 2 weeks on a Leopard (don't buy one - a completely pile of cr@p) and 1 week on a Lagoon better than the Leopard but honestly, quite rolly and a pig to sail.
 

Trident

Well-known member
Joined
21 Sep 2012
Messages
2,767
Location
Somewhere, nowhere
Visit site
Do you want a luxury home on the water or do you want to sail? Do you have a budget in mind (Outremer or Dazcat at £1-2M will be lovely for either option) I have only ever sailed cats. I would never touch a Leopard or a Lagoon and it would have to be free to get me on a Fontaine Pajot (ok not quite that bad but very cheap) . Many of the new brands (HH etc) look great but seem to have a lot of teething problems and many of the charter brands have quality issues but there are some good ones but an idea of use, budget and sailing preferences would make it easier to recommend a few to look for.

I've worked on many different makes of cats (I was based next door to a large multihull dealer so did lots of upgrades and refits etc) so happy to give any advice if you have a "field" in mind. Feel free to PM if you prefer
 

RupertW

Well-known member
Joined
20 Mar 2002
Messages
10,291
Location
Greenwich
Visit site
I’ve never sailed old cats but have sailed newish Lagoons and Leopards including on cross-Atlantic and the Lagoon was immeasurably better in every way.
 

goeasy123

Active member
Joined
10 Nov 2018
Messages
760
Visit site
I didn't want to influence opinions so I didn't mention any names in my original post, but I'm afraid you're reinforcing my bias'. I've sailed on Lagoons and FP. They were s*** in all respects. In the main, they're not built to last and a nightmare to rebuild/refit. RupertW, that an interesting observation. I can't imagine anything worse than a Lagoon.... but only from my experience. That puts Leopard out??

Outremers, Dazs and any other performance cats won't carry weight. If you load them as a liveaboard you finish up with no-performance, little space and a high price.

The youtuber's exeriences with 'buy-new', including HH suggests don't buy new. And the depreciation from new is precipitious for any cat brand.... not buying new.

What about Balance and Nautitech or similar?
 

Trident

Well-known member
Joined
21 Sep 2012
Messages
2,767
Location
Somewhere, nowhere
Visit site
Leopard are in many warranty wrangles with buyers and the quality look appalling - I wouldn't actually get on a newly built one to cross the harbour.

With regard to weight - it depends again how many aboard , how much weight etc but many Outremer and Dazcats are cruised successfully and still sail well if you are say only a couple on a 40-50 foot boat.

Broadblue made some good boats quality wise and they are built as cruisers - so will carry weight but no dagger boards and slower but still with a good turn of speed. There is a nice second hand 55 foot at Multihull world at £925K right now that had an extensive refit for an ARC and then was put back on the market . I've sailed on that one and it will do 22 knots in 18-20 of true wind and for a couple would carry all the toys without hassle. But its almost a million and its 55 foot long and too wide for many marinas..

The Nautitech 40 seems universally loved by owners - I've met two or three experienced owners now and all professed to love the boat and never want to change it for anything else - quite quick, well built (now) and pretty too. Or of course you can look older like the bigger Prout's and refit to suit (which I did with a Quasar 50; nothing original but the hull now and solidly built and will do 14-18 knots quite happily )
 

shan

Well-known member
Joined
14 Apr 2014
Messages
14,970
Location
East Algarve
Visit site
I didn't want to influence opinions so I didn't mention any names in my original post, but I'm afraid you're reinforcing my bias'. I've sailed on Lagoons and FP. They were s*** in all respects. In the main, they're not built to last and a nightmare to rebuild/refit. RupertW, that an interesting observation. I can't imagine anything worse than a Lagoon.... but only from my experience. That puts Leopard out??

Outremers, Dazs and any other performance cats won't carry weight. If you load them as a liveaboard you finish up with no-performance, little space and a high price.

The youtuber's exeriences with 'buy-new', including HH suggests don't buy new. And the depreciation from new is precipitious for any cat brand.... not buying new.

What about Balance and Nautitech or similar?
I wouldn't climb on a Leopard again, if I was paid money... lots of money.
 

BurnitBlue

Well-known member
Joined
22 Oct 2005
Messages
4,546
Location
In Transit
Visit site
If you are experienced with a monohull, consider why, in detail you want to change to a catamaran. For instance, a few reasons other poeple use are. Much less suffering from sea sickness. Stability at sea or anchor ... no hot coffee etc flung on your lap. Wide foredeck for sail and anchor work. Guest separation. Safety, unballasted ultimately, upside down on the surface is far better than right side up on the sea bed. Space to breath. Heel free cooking and eating.

Personally I sailed a smallish Prout Quest 31 for five years in the Med, Atkantic. Caribbean and USA coast. I have since upraded to a Prout 37 Snowgoose elite. go anywhere go anytime and in comfort. Ask why other people chose a catamaran and choose the catamaran that aligns with your expectations.

PS, An older Prout can often avoid cat marina excess charges because narrower beam. Also my Prouts can tour the European canals.
 
Last edited:

oldbloke

Well-known member
Joined
24 Jun 2018
Messages
578
Visit site
Not a cheap option but Catana Catamarans appear to be held to be higher quality and better sailers without being too extreme
 

Irish Rover

Well-known member
Joined
5 Feb 2017
Messages
7,106
Location
Türkiye
Visit site
I've no idea now what to do with my Leopard powercat, after reading this thread. Obviously it would be completely reckless of me to ever use it again. I could consider selling it, or giving it away free, but I'm worried I'd be criminally liable if anything went wrong in the future.
 

dunedin

Well-known member
Joined
3 Feb 2004
Messages
14,557
Location
Boat (over winters in) the Clyde
Visit site
I've no idea now what to do with my Leopard powercat, after reading this thread. Obviously it would be completely reckless of me to ever use it again. I could consider selling it, or giving it away free, but I'm worried I'd be criminally liable if anything went wrong in the future.
Don’t put up too much sail in a F8 - probably not an issue due to lack of mast?

Don’t cross any Oceans - perhaps might run out of fuel anyway?

Go boating :)
 

Sea Change

Well-known member
Joined
13 Feb 2014
Messages
1,271
Visit site
We never had the budget for any cat so it was never an option for us. Never sailed on one, but many of our friends have cats so we've been able to form a few opinions.
As a living space, most of them are superb. Indoor-outdoor seamless space, fly bridge for sundowners while the kids go nuts on the trampoline. 4kw of solar isn't uncommon. It's all good
Sailing wise... it really seems to vary.

Catana- owners seem to love them. A friend is spending the best part of a year rebuilding his hurricane damaged one, despite the complexity of a cored hull. He is clearly very attached to it. Other friends crossed the Atlantic with their family and had no troubles.

Lagoon- the most common. Build problems are well documented. I've heard that the smaller ones are embarrassingly slow, especially upwind.

Bali- there are hundreds of them around and they are all in charter fleets. Nobody seems to choose them to own and live on.

FP- seem to be a slight cut above Lagoon, I've not heard of as many build issues.

Outremer- not been aboard one, they aren't so popular with family cruisers. Maybe it's a price or load carrying issue.

Leopard- friends had a very bad experience with structural failure mid Atlantic.

Nautitech- a few friends have Open 40s and seem to like them. One such friend is a seasoned ocean racer at a very high level (came close to putting together a Vendée campaign a few years back), so he knows what he's doing and he knows how to sail, and the Open 40 was what he chose.
They definitely have a bit less space than a similarly sized Lagoon or FP.

Broadblue- might be a one off but the only person I know with one has had structural problems caused by sailing in strong conditions.
 

Chiara’s slave

Well-known member
Joined
14 Apr 2022
Messages
8,381
Location
Western Solent
Visit site
Edel Cat, just to throw another one in the mix. And Darren would be most upset to know people think his boats won’t carry a couple of tons. They certainly will. You may lose a bit of speed, but the same is true of all boats, though clearly multis are more affected. A Dazcat starts off with such an edge it’ll still be the fastest livaboard. Outremar, the hulls are a bit lower volume so whilst I have no hands on experience of one, it’s a reasonably sure prediction they’ll lose a bit more, though again, where they start from is so far removed from you FPs, Lagoons and Broadblues that I can’t see that being a problem. Cats come with some compromises, as do monos. They’re different compromises, you have to adapt to them. Sailing a cat, you start to watch the weight of your clutter. A tender that’s 5kg lighter? A good start. Using your watermaker more and having less in the tanks. Of course if you buy the right cat, you won’t use as much fuel as you can sail more. We’ve been multi sailors for 40 years now, not Iiveaboard, but a lot of miles, and a lot of cruising and racing. I can no longer imagine living life on my ear.
 
Top