Freedom 39 PH | |
Insignia: | File:Freedom Yachts Star Logo.jpg |
Insignia Size: | 100px |
Designer: | Ron Holland and Gary Hoyt |
Location: | United States |
Year: | 1983 |
Builder: | Freedom Yachts |
Role: | Cruiser |
Draft: | 5.5feet |
Displacement: | 185000NaN0 |
Hull Type: | Monohull |
Construction: | Fiberglass |
Loa: | 39feet |
Lwl: | 31feet |
Beam: | 12.83feet |
Engine: | Perkins Engines 500NaN0 diesel engine |
Keel Type: | fin keel |
Ballast: | 53000NaN0 |
Rudder Type: | skeg-mounted rudder |
Rig Type: | Cat-rigged schooner |
P: | 44.5feet |
E: | 17.5feet |
Sailplan: | Cat-rigged schooner |
Sailarea Main: | 456square feet |
Sailarea Headsail: | 288square feet |
Sailarea Total: | 744square feet |
The Freedom 39 PH is an American pilothouse schooner sailboat that was designed by Ron Holland and Gary Hoyt as a cruiser and first built in 1983.[1] [2] [3] [4]
The Freedom 39 PH was introduced at the same time as the related Freedom 39 design, a boat with a similar hull, but a ketch rig and a conventional aft cockpit, without a pilothouse.[1] [5]
The boat was built by Tillotson Pearson in the United States for Freedom Yachts, starting in 1983.[1] [4] [6]
The Freedom 39 PH is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass using a balsa core, with wooden trim. It is a cat-rigged schooner, with carbon-fiber conventional booms and two free-standing carbon-fiber masts. It has an aft cockpit and a low-mounted pilothouse forward of the cockpit. It features a raked stem, a slightly reverse transom, a skeg-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed fin keel. The pilothouse has a second wheel for steering. The design displaces 185000NaN0 and carries 53000NaN0 of ballast.[1] [4]
The boat has a draft of 5.5feet with the standard keel fitted.[1]
The boat is fitted with a British Perkins Engines 500NaN0 for docking and maneuvering. The fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of .[1] [4]
The design has sleeping accommodations for six people. It has a private, aft, double cabin, under the cockpit, accessed from the pilothouse, a double settee berth in the pilothouse and a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin. There is a captain's chair in the pilothouse, along with a navigation station. The galley is U-shaped and located just aft of the bow cabin. It includes a three-burner propane stove, an oven and double sinks. There are two separate heads, one just aft of the bow cabin on the starboard side, opposite the galley and another in the aft cabin on the port side. The forward head includes a molded fiberglass shower.[4]
Ventilation is provided by two opening ports in the aft cabin and four hatches, located over the bow cabin, the forward head, the galley and the main cabin.[4]
All sail controls are led to the cockpit which includes two winches and sheet stoppers. The halyards, the reefing lines and the boom vang for the aft mast are all controlled from the cockpit.[4]
In a 1994 review Richard Sherwood wrote, "this cruiser was designed to offer the advantages of a schooner but with improved windward sailing characteristics. Since there is no forestay it cannot sag, and upwind performance is improved. The pilothouse is very low and does not block vision from the cockpit."[4]
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