BABA 35
Description
Introduced in 1976
Construction Details
Designer | Robert Perry |
---|---|
Length | 35.000 ft |
LOA | 34.830 ft |
LWL | 29.580 ft |
Beam | 11.170 ft |
Displacement | 21140 lb |
Max Draft | 5.500 ft |
The standard boat dimensions
i | 49.90 ft |
---|---|
j | 17.60 ft |
p | 43.50 ft |
e | 15.50 ft |
p2 | - |
e2 | - |
I | J | P | E | P2 | E2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49.90 ft | 17.60 ft | 43.50 ft | 15.50 ft | - | - |
Sails
An asterisk indicates that a computer algorithm was used to determine the dimension based on sailboat rig dimensions (usually the I, J, E, and P)
Sail Type | STORMTRYSAIL |
---|---|
Luff | * 16.8 ft - (5121 mm) |
Foot | * 15.45 ft - (4709 mm) |
Leech | * 14 ft - (4267 mm) |
Length Perp | * 14 |
Tack Angle | * -25 ° |
Area | * 101 ft² |
Sail Type | STORMJIB |
---|---|
Luff | * 29.1 ft - (8870 mm) |
Foot | * 13.48 ft - (4109 mm) |
Leech | * 23.26 ft - (7090 mm) |
Perc LP | * 60 |
Length Perp | * 10.56 |
Deck Angle | * 18.99 ° |
Area | * 153.67 ft² |
Sail Type | MAINSAIL |
---|---|
Luff | * 43.5 ft - (13259 mm) |
Foot | * 15.5 ft - (4724 mm) |
Leech-AftHdBd | * 45.39 ft - (13835 mm) |
Tack Ang | * 88 ° |
Diag (clew/head) | * 45.67 ft - (13920 mm) |
Head (inches) | * 6 in |
Area (no Roach) | * 346.35 ft² |
Sail Type | ASYMMETRICAL |
---|---|
Luff | * 50.27 ft - (15322 mm) |
Foot | * 29.04 ft - (8851 mm) |
Leech | * 46.25 ft - (14097 mm) |
Perc LP | * 165 |
Area | * 1095 ft² |
Sail Type | JIBSAIL |
---|---|
Luff | 42.36 ft - (12911 mm) |
Foot | * 23.89 ft - (7282 mm) |
Leech | * 36.14 ft - (11015 mm) |
Percentage LP | * 115.68 % |
Length Perpendicular | * 20.36 ft - (6206 mm) |
Deck Angle | * 12.12 ° |
Area | * 431.2 ft² |
Sail Type | GENOA |
---|---|
Luff | 50.3 ft - (15331 mm) |
Foot | * 28.96 ft - (8827 mm) |
Leech | * 46.96 ft - (14313 mm) |
Percentage LP | * 150.85 % |
Length Perpendicular | * 26.55 ft - (8092 mm) |
Deck Angle | * 4.11 ° |
Area | * 667.74 ft² |
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.