Sonar (keelboat)

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Specifications Under Current Rules
Image:Sonar (keelboat).svg

Number of crew 3
LOA 7 m (23 ft)
LWL 6.1 m (19 ft 11 in)
Beam 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in)
Draft 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in)
Hull weight (with fittings) 950 kg (2100 lb)
Sail Area of total of Main and Jib 23.2 m² (250 ft²)
Sail Area of total of Spinnaker 22.8 m² (245 ft²)
Paralympic Class
A Sonar start
A Sonar start

The Sonar is a 7 m (23 ft) one-design keelboat for three to five people.

The boat is 7 m long. It has a beam (width) of 2.4 m and draft (depth) of 1.2 m. It weighs 950 kg, of which 408 kg is ballast, with a sail area of 23.2 m² plus a 22.8 m² spinnaker. It is bermuda-rigged, with a large mainsail and a 100% jib. The Sonar is usually crewed by four.

The Sonar has been a Paralympic class since 2000. When being sailed by disabled it is crewed by 3, and sailed without a spinnaker. Instead, when running downwind a whisker pole is used to hold the jib out to windward for maximum exposed sail area. The Sonar is well suited for handicapped sailing because of its large cockpit making adaptations easy.

The Sonar was designed in 1979 by Bruce Kirby, designer of the popular Laser dinghy. Since then, over 700 boats have been built. Most of the fleet is in the USA, with smaller fleets in Britain and Canada. Since its adoption as a Paralympic class the Sonar has spread to many other countries as well.

The Sonar was inducted into the American Sailboat Hall of Fame in 2004.

Contents

[edit] History

It started when Bruce Kirby's home club (Noroton Yacht Club, Darien, CT USA) couldn't find the right boat to get their members involved in club racing; fewer and fewer of its members were participating.

They studied a great many existing classes of boats but all were considered too expensive, too slow, too demanding to sail, or just plain uncomfortable. So Bruce was asked to design a new boat specifically to meet the requirements of a club racing one-design keelboat fleet.

It had to be exciting to race, but easy to handle by sailors of all ages, strengths and skill levels. It had to be a really good day sailor, spacious and comfortable to sit in all day long. It had to be trailerable, plus easy to launch for wet or dry sailing. Plus a safe, well behaved training boat to help teach new sailors how to sail and have fun doing it. Finally, it had to have a good but uncomplicated set of class rules.

The result was the Sonar. The Noroton Yacht Club got every thing they wanted and more. And the Sonar has been greeted with enthusiasm by individuals and clubs all over the world.

[edit] Reigning Champions

[edit] Paralympics

The 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens, Greece

Medal Skipper Crew
Gold Dror Cohen (ISR) Arnon Efrati, Benni Vexler
Silver Udo Hessels (NED) Marcel van de Veen, Mischa Rossen, Annette Ten Dam
Bronze John Ross Duggan (USA) Jean Paul Creignou, Bradley Johnson, Roger Cleworth Jr

[edit] Worlds

[edit] Open

The 2007 World Championship in Marblehead, USA

Medal Skipper Crew
Gold Bill Lynn (USA) Ed Keller, Chris Hufstader, Doug Sabin
Silver Greg Anthony (USA) Mike Rush, PJ Schaffer, Henry Filter
Bronze Rick Dominique (USA)

[edit] Disabled

The 2007 World Championship in Rochester, USA

Medal Skipper Crew
Gold Rick Doerr (USA) Tim Angle, Bill Donahue
Silver Paul Callahan (USA) Tom Brown, Roger Cleworth
Bronze Jens Kroker (GER) Tobias Schuetz, Sigi Mainka

[edit] Quotes

"The Sonar may well be the best boat I've ever designed." - Bruce Kirby -

[edit] External links

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