Brick | |
Designer: | Jean-Jacques Herbulot |
Location: | France |
Year: | 1964 |
Builder: | Chantier Mallard Archambault Boats |
Draft: | 3.94feet |
Displacement: | 39680NaN0 |
Hull Type: | monohull |
Construction: | fibreglass |
Loa: | 26.08feet |
Lwl: | 31.33feet |
Beam: | 8.2feet |
Keel Type: | fin keel |
Ballast: | 15430NaN0 |
Rudder Type: | skeg-mounted rudder |
Rig Type: | Bermuda rig |
Sailplan: | fractional rigged sloop |
Sailarea Total: | 272square feet |
The Brick (English: Brig, referring to the class of sailing ship) is a French sailboat that was designed by Jean-Jacques Herbulot and first built in 1964.[1] [2] [3]
The design was built by Chantier Mallard starting in 1964 and by Archambault Boats of Dangé-Saint-Romain, France, starting in 1967, but it is now out of production. Archambault, which had been founded in 1967, went out of business in 2015.[1] [3] [4] [5]
The Brick is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of wood. It has a 9/10 fractional sloop rig, with a single set of unswept spreaders. The hull has a raked stem, a raised reverse transom, a skeg-mounted rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed fin keel. The deck has a reverse sheer.[1] [3]
It displaces 39680NaN0 and carries 15430NaN0 of ballast. It has a hull speed of 6.19kn.[1] [3]