Nacra 17

Nacra 17
Development
Designer Morrelli & Melvin
& Nacra Sailing
Year 2011
Boat
Crew 2
Boat weight 141 kg (311 lb)
Hull
Type Cat
LOH 5.25 m (17.2 ft)
Beam 2.59 m (8 ft 6 in)
Sails
Mainsail area 14.65 m2 (157.7 sq ft)
Jib/genoa area 4.0 m2 (43 sq ft)
Gennaker area 19.5 m2 (210 sq ft)
Current Olympic equipment
 Tornado

The Nacra 17 is a performance catamaran used for sailing. It was designed in 2011, went into production in 2012 and has been the focus of multihull sailing at the Olympic Games since its conception.

The Nacra has been converted to a sailing hydrofoil for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.[1]


History

The Nacra 17 was specifically created to meet the criteria laid down for the new olympic discipline a first for Olympic sailing a mixed crewed boat. In May 2012 International Sailing Federation chose the Nacra 17 as the equipment for the mixed multi hull at the 2016 Olympic Sailing Regatta [2] and 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.[3]

Morrelli & Melvin, the boat's designers, summed up the design philosophy[4] with the following quote:

The Formula 16 is on the small end of the scale for the crew weight range specified by ISAF (120 kg to 140 kg) and, in our opinion, would be more exciting and challenging to sail for Olympic-caliber sailors if it had a more powerful sail plan. The F18 typical crew weights exceed the range specified by ISAF. The F18 is also quite a heavy boat for its length and could be made lighter, but the hull volume and surface area would be needlessly large for a lighter Olympic spec F18 platform.

Since no existing design or class fit the ISAF specs, we decided to create an all-new design that is about 17 feet long, called the NACRA 17. Compared to an F16 class catamaran, it is 250mm longer, 100mm wider, has a taller mast and more sail area, and curved dagger boards.

The curve boards also give an added dimension to the sailing.

The ISAF Equipment Evaluation Panel wrote:[5]

The clear preference of the MNA Sailors and the Evaluation Panel was the innovative new NACRA 17. Designed specifically for the Mixed Multihull criteria the Evaluation Panel concluded the NACRA 17 is seen as the best option. Featuring curved dagger boards providing vertical lift, the NACRA 17 will carry a wider –range of crew weight better than the 16 footers and is considerably lighter than a Formula 18. The modern NACRA 17 also offers the sailors in the Mixed Multihull Event the exciting challenge of mastering the potential lift of the curved daggerboards.

Events

Olympics

Games
Gold Silver Bronze
2016 Rio de Janeiro
 Argentina (ARG)
Santiago Lange
Cecilia Carranza Saroli
 Australia (AUS)
Jason Waterhouse
Lisa Darmanin
 Austria (AUT)
Thomas Zajac
Tanja Frank

World Championship

Year
Gold Silver Bronze
2013 The Hague
 France
Billy Besson
Marie Riou
 Great Britain
Ben Saxton
Hannah Diamond
  Switzerland
Matías Bühler
Nathalie Brugger
2014 Santander
 France
Billy Besson
Marie Riou
 Argentina
Santiago Lange
Cecilia Carranza Saroli
 Australia
Jason Waterhouse
Lisa Darmanin
2015 Aarhus
 France
Billy Besson
Marie Riou
 Australia
Jason Waterhouse
Lisa Darmanin
 Netherlands
Mandy Mulder
Coen de Koning
2016 Clearwater
 France
Billy Besson
Marie Riou
 Denmark
Allan Nørregaard
Anette Viborg Andreasen
 Italy
Vittorio Bissaro
Silvia Sicouri
2017 La Grande-Motte[6]
 Great Britain
Ben Saxton
Katie Dabson
 Spain
Fernando Echávarri
Tara Pacheco
 Italy
Ruggero Tita
Caterina Banti
2018 Aarhus
[7]
 Italy
Ruggero Tita
Caterina Banti
 Australia
Nathan Outteridge
Haylee Outteridge
 Argentina
Santiago Lange
Cecilia Carranza Saroli

See also

References

  1. "WHO CAN TAME THE FOILING CAT?". Yachting New Zealand. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  2. http://www.sailing.org/38281.php ISAF News Story
  3. 16 November 2013, 2013 ISAF Annual Conference Draws To A Close in Muscat, Sultanate of Oman
  4. http://sailinganarchy.com/2012/05/04/the-choice/ Interview with the Designer
  5. http://www.sailing.org/38217.php ISAF Mixed Multihull Evaluation Report
  6. "2017 World Championship". nacra17.org.
  7. "2018 Nacra 17 World Championship". manage2sail.com.
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