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Houdini (sailboat)

Sailboat class From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Houdini (sailboat)
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The Houdini is a New Zealand sailing dinghy that was designed by John Welsford as a cruiser and first built in 2011.[1][2][3][4]

Quick Facts Development, Designer ...

The boat's designer intended it as an "escape machine" and so named it in honour of Harry Houdini.[3][4]

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Production

The design is supplied in the form of plans. It has been built by amateur builders and also by some professional builders on a custom basis.[1]

Design

Thumb
A Houdini, showing the transom. This boat has a Minn Kota electric motor.

The boat was designed for camping on-shore and provides stowage space to take a large amount of camping gear. It can accommodate four people for camping-cruising or up to seven people for day sailing. The design has sleeping accommodation for two adults under a boom tent.[3][4]

The Houdini is a recreational sailboat, built predominantly of wood, with a plywood hull and wooden spars and trim. The prototype used bamboo spars. It has a lug sail rig and can be fitted with a mizzen mast and sail as a yawl. It has a pronounced sheer, a plumb stem, a vertical transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller and a retractable centreboard. It displaces 187 lb (85 kg). A cuddy cabin is optional.[1][3][4]

The boat may be optionally fitted with an outboard engine for docking and maneuvering.[3][4]

Boats have also been completed with gaff rigs and sloop rigs.[3]

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See also

Similar sailboats

References

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