Sadler 25 Explained

The Sadler 25 is a 7.42-meter (24 ft 4 in) fiberglass sailing yacht, designed in 1974 by David Sadler of Great Britain as an evolution of his earlier Contessa 26 which was in turn an evolution of the Nordic Folkboat.[1] Although both the Folkboat and the Contessa 25 had relatively narrow long keel hulls, Sadler's new design utilised a wider hull to give more form stability[2] and the (then) new finkeel together with a skeg-mounted rudder.

Built between 1974 and 1981, the Sadler 25 was normally rigged as a masthead sloop, and was offered with the option of deep or shallow fin keels, twin bilge keels or a centre plate.

In its deep-fin configuration, the Sadler 25 was a successful cruiser-racer which quickly became popular in yacht clubs throughout the U.K., and completed Round Britain and Trans-Atlantic voyages.[2]

The Sadler 25 is widely regarded as one of the classic late-20th-century production yachts, and many examples are still giving faithful service both cruising and racing.

Specifications[2]

LOA

7.42 m (24 ft 4 in)

LWL

5.84 m (19 ft 2 in)

Beam

2.67 m (8 ft 9 in)

Draft (fin keel): 1.42 m (4 ft 8 in)

Draft (shallow fin): 1.16 m (3 ft 10 in)

Draft (bilge keel): 0.99 m (3 ft 3 in)

Draft (centre plate): 0.7 m/1.5 m

Displacement

1814 kg (4000 lb)

Ballast Ratio: 47%

Notes and References

  1. https://www.lucasyachting.co.uk/sadler-and-starlight/ Mike Lucas, History of the Sadlers and Starlights
  2. https://www.lucasyachting.co.uk/sadler-and-starlight/sadler-25-yacht/ Mike Lucas, Sadler 25, online brochure