Stuart Knockabout Explained

Stuart Knockabout
Insignia:
SK
Insignia Size:150px
Designer:L. Francis Herreshoff
Location:United States
Year:1932
No Built:76
Builder:Edey & Duff/Ballentines's Boat Shop
Stuart Knockabout LLC
Role:Day sailer
Draft:5.5feet with centerboard down
Displacement:40000NaN0
Hull Type:monohull
Construction:Wood or fiberglass
Loa:28feet
Lwl:22.83feet
Beam:6.92feet
Engine:Torqeedo 1003C 1.50NaN0 electric engine
Keel Type:modified long keel and centerboard
Ballast:24000NaN0
Rudder Type:keel-mounted rudder
Rig Type:Bermuda rig
I:24feet
J:8.75feet
P:28.6feet
E:13feet
Sailplan:fractional rigged sloop
Sailarea Main:185.9square feet
Sailarea Headsail:105square feet
Sailarea Total:290.9square feet
Phrf:185

The Stuart Knockabout is an American trailerable sailboat that was designed as a daysailer, by L. Francis Herreshoff and first built in 1932. The boat is L.F. Herreshoff design number 53.[1] [2] [3]

The boat was a commission for a single boat to be designed and built for Willoughby Stuart in 1932. Stuart was seeking a large daysailer with a shallow draft that had ease of handling, capacity and comfort. The boat only entered production in 1989, some 17 years after the designer's death.[1] [4]

Production

The design was initially just a single boat in 1932, with a few more completed from wood. It was put into production in 1989, with the hulls being built by Edey & Duff in Mattapoisett, Massachusetts, United States and the boats finished by Ballentines's Boat Shop in Cataumet, Massachusetts. Edey & Duff ceased operations in 2010 when General Manager Dave Devignon died and Steve Ballentine and his daughter Amy Ballentine Stevens bought the molds and rights to the design. They formed Stuart Knockabout LLC as a subsidiary of Ballentine's Boat Shop and continue to produce the boat. A total of 16 boats had been completed by 1994 and 76 by 2020.[1] [3] [5] [6] [7]

Design

The Stuart Knockabout is a recreational keelboat, initially built of wood and later adapted for fiberglass over an Airex foam core construction by Bill Harding of Edey & Duff. It has a fractional sloop rig, with a boom-mounted, self-tending jib. The hull has a spooned, raked stem; a raised counter, angled transom; a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed modified long keel, with a cutaway forefoot and a retractable, solid PVC centerboard, with raising gear with a 2:1 mechanical advantage. It displaces 40000NaN0 and carries 24000NaN0 of lead ballast, all in the long keel.[1] [3]

The boat has a draft of 5.5feet with the centerboard extended and 2.75feet with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water.[1]

The boat may be optionally fitted with a German Torqeedo Travel 1003C electric engine of 1.50NaN0 or the 30NaN0 Torqeedo Cruise 2.0 Pod Drive, mounted on a side bracket for docking and manoeuvring.[1] [8]

For sailing the design has a 4:1 mainsheet. It is equipped with standard equipment that includes sails, navigation lights, a fixed bilge pump, two life jackets and an oar. Factory options include teak seats, a boat trailer for road transport, a spinnaker, genoa, a second oar, a side-mounted outboard motor bracket and a swimming ladder.[3] [9]

The design has a PHRF racing average handicap of 185.[3]

Operational history

In a 1994 review Richard Sherwood wrote, "while there are not too many Knockabouts, the design warrants inclusion. The original boats were wood, and while now in fiberglass, the classic wood lines are retained ... The cockpit is over 9 feet long, has bench seats, and the coaming is a backrest. Forward, shelves and a decked-over space provide storage for sails. In addition, there is a stern locker ... As with many Herreshoff designs, the Knockabout is shallow draft."[3]

Rob Peake wrote a review for Classic Boat magazine, in which he said, "the 28ft Knockabout carries 265 square foot of sail and is a common step-up for the Herreshoff 12½ sailor, also for those downsizing from a yacht. You get plenty of space, enough for a family, an easy-to-handle rig and judging by her performance in the perfect evening breeze we’re blessed with, a stable hull (a light, foam-cored fibreglass sandwich with 400 pounds [2400 lbs] of keel ballast). The centreboard reduces draft from 5ft 6in to 2ft 9in."[10]

See also

Similar sailboats

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stuart Knockabout sailboat . 25 November 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://archive.today/20201201140747/https://sailboatdata.com/sailboat/stuart-knockabout. 1 December 2020 . live.
  2. Web site: L. Francis Herreshoff 1890 - 1972 . 25 November 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://archive.today/20201006000811/https://sailboatdata.com/designer/herreshoff-l-francis. 6 October 2020 . live.
  3. Sherwood, Richard M.: A Field Guide to Sailboats of North America, Second Edition, pages 128-129. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1994.
  4. Web site: Stuart Knockabout Overview . 25 November 2020. Stuart Knockabout LLC. stuartknockaboutllc.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20180825192706/http://stuartknockaboutllc.com/skoverview.pdf. 25 August 2018. live.
  5. Web site: Edey & Duff (USA) 1968 - 2010 . 25 November 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://archive.today/20201117161830/https://sailboatdata.com/builder/edey-duff-usa. 17 November 2020 . live.
  6. Web site: Ballentines's Boat Shop (USA) 1974 - . 25 November 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://archive.today/20201125162356/https://sailboatdata.com/builder/ballentiness-boat-shop-usa. 25 November 2020 . live.
  7. Web site: Stuart Knockabout - L.F. Herreshoff Design 53 . 25 November 2020. Stuart Knockabout LLC. stuartknockaboutllc.com. 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20201112015506/http://www.stuartknockaboutllc.com/. 12 November 2020. live.
  8. Web site: Stuart Knockabout - Motor Options . 25 November 2020. Stuart Knockabout LLC. stuartknockaboutllc.com. 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20190913085446/http://www.stuartknockaboutllc.com/motors.html. 13 September 2019. live.
  9. Web site: Stuart Knockabout - Specifications & Options . 25 November 2020. Stuart Knockabout LLC. stuartknockaboutllc.com. 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20190906201654/http://www.stuartknockaboutllc.com/specs-options.html. 6 September 2019. live.
  10. Web site: Knocking about on Buzzard's Bay. 25 November 2020. Peake. Rob . Classic Boat magazine. https://web.archive.org/web/20200810151602/https://www.classicboat.co.uk/editors-blog/knocking-buzzards-bay/. 10 August 2020. live.