A Class Catamaran

Description

The International A-Class Catamaran (A-Cat) is an ISAF international development class. It has a length of 18’, a 7.5’ beam, a minimum weight of 165lbs, and 20 square meters of sail (Peter Johnstone). Power-wise, the A-Cat is among the leaders for its size. Upwind comfortably at well over 10 knots and downwind over 20 (knots), the A-Cat is one of the quickest boats around. All major components are carbon fiber allowing it to weigh in less than almost any other boat of its size or smaller, multi or mono hulled. Larger than a Laser at nearly the same weight, the A-Cat is easily rigged and launched in less time than it will take to read this article. The rig is a single square top main on a carbon mast with a single trapeze wire. Sails are usually made out of carbon or Kevlar fiber laminates to maximize stiffness while maintaining its ultra-light status. Hulls are typically (on modern boats) with a carbon skin over a nomex honeycomb core. All of the current advancements, carbon fiber parts, square top mains and hull design, stems from the developmental nature of the class. Owners are encouraged to experiment with designs on the boat in an attempt to achieve even more speed. For these reasons, amongst others, the A-Cat is widely regarded as the fastest single-handed dinghy currently in production.

Construction Details

Designer Unknown
Length 5.490 ft
LOA 18.000 ft
LWL 18.000 ft
Beam 7.520 ft
Displacement 165 lb
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The standard boat dimensions

i -
j -
p 29.03 ft
e 6.39 ft
p2 -
e2 -

Sails

Sail Type MAIN (LG ROACH)
Luff 23 ft - (7010 mm)
Foot 10 ft - (3048 mm)
Leech * 24.55 ft - (7483 mm)
Tack Angle * 88 °
Diag (clew/head) * 24.76 ft - (7547 mm)
Head (inches) * 4.5 in - (114 mm)
Area * 118.76 ft²
Comments This is a sail requested by a Sailrite customer. This is a development class so sails will differ a good deal.

Disclaimer. Boats are not all the same -- even when produced in the same factory of the same model. Sailrite does its best to publish accurate dimensions, but we often find it worthwhile to have our customers measure their boats carefully before we produce kits for them. You should take the same precautions, especially when the data is not from Sailrite.