Sun Odyssey 349 | |
Image Boat: | File:Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 349 sailboat French Kiss 2356.jpg |
Designer: | Marc Lombard Design |
Location: | Canada United States |
Year: | 2014 |
Builder: | Jeanneau |
Role: | Cruiser |
Draft: | 6.5feet |
Displacement: | 117950NaN0 |
Hull Type: | Monohull |
Construction: | Fiberglass |
Loa: | 33.92feet |
Lwl: | 30.84feet |
Beam: | 11.29feet |
Engine: | Yanmar 3YM20 210NaN0 diesel engine |
Keel Type: | fin keel with a weighted bulb |
Ballast: | 34830NaN0 |
Rudder Type: | twin spade-type rudders |
Rig Type: | Bermuda rig |
I: | 43.57feet |
J: | 12.37feet |
P: | 40.68feet |
E: | 13.62feet |
Sailplan: | Fractional rigged sloop |
Sailarea Main: | 277.03square feet |
Sailarea Headsail: | 269.48square feet |
Sailarea Spin: | 1023square feet |
Sailarea Total: | 546.51square feet |
The Sun Odyssey 349 is a French sailboat that was designed by Marc Lombard Design for cruising and first built in 2014.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
The design is built by Jeanneau in France and in the United States starting in 2014. It remained in production in 2020.[1] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
The Sun Odyssey 349 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass with a hard chine hull. The deck is injection molded with an end-grain balsa core. It has a 9/10 fractional sloop rig with a deck-stepped mast, Technique Voile sails, double aft-swept spreaders, aluminum spars and no backstay. Sail control uses friction rings instead of a mainsheet traveler and a rigid boom vang. It features a plumb stem, a slightly reverse transom with a gas strut assisted, drop-down tailgate-style swimming platform, dual internally mounted spade-type rudders controlled by two wheels and a fixed fin keel, shoal draft wing keel or lifting keel. It can also be equipped with an asymmetrical spinnaker of 1023square feet.[1] [3] [4] [5] [6] [8]
The boat is fitted with a Japanese Yanmar 3YM20 diesel engine of 210NaN0 for docking and maneuvering. The fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of .[1]
The design has sleeping accommodation for six to eight people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, two straight settees on either side of a drop-leaf table in the main cabin and an aft cabin with a double berth on the starboard side or optional dual aft cabins. The galley is located on the starboard side just forward of the companionway ladder. The galley is L-shaped and is equipped with a two-burner stove, a capacity icebox and a single stainless steel sink. A navigation station is opposite the galley, on the port side. The head is located just aft of the navigation station on the port side. The interior woodwork is teak or optionally grey cedar.[3] [4] [5] [6]
The boat has 740NaN0 of standing headroom in the gallery, 730NaN0 in the saloon and 760NaN0 in the bow and aft cabins.[3] [4] [5]
In a 2014 review for Sail magazine, Zuzana Prochazka, described its sailing qualities, "this boat likes to sail on the wind sheeted in flat. With 10 knots of true wind at a 40-degree apparent wind angle, we scooted along at 5.3 knots. When the wind inched up to 11 knots and we cracked off to 60 degrees, we bumped up to 6.1 knots. On a broad reach we managed 4.9 knots at 130 degrees in about 9 knots of true. Tacking was easy, and the boat responded quickly."[8]
Zuzana Prochazka also did a 2014 review for boats.com, writing, "the idea with this small model is to attract couples and young families and have them grow with the model line as their sailing experience also grows. Personally, I can also see seasoned couples downsizing from large family cruisers to this more manageable model, which is both less demanding to sail and easier on the wallet."[9]
Yachting Monthly writer Chris Beeson reviewed the design in 2014, stating, "our test sail for Jeanneau’s new Sun Odyssey 349 took place in pretty punchy conditions, gusty with up to 30 knots over the deck upwind. Despite the fact that we had taken in both of the main’s two reefs we were still overpowered but, with the main feathered off and the jib’s leech open, she bounded upwind with great enthusiasm. She would lean on her chines in a gust and just accelerate. Tremendous fun." He concluded, "All in all, the 349 is a gleaming little family cruiser, eager and able to please."[10]
In a 2014 Cruising World photo essay, Billy Black, stated, "the latest in the Sun Odyssey line shares the sleek looks of its siblings but hints at things to come: hard chines that begin forward of the mast; positive sheer for more volume below; a square-top main; and a variety of keel options, including a swing foil for really thin water."[11]
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