
The Cruising Multihull
by White, Chris-
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Summary
Author Biography
As an avid 13-year-old sailor, Chris White became interested in multihulls after a day sail on a charter trimaran in St. Croix. Five years later, he built and launched the 31-foot Searunner trimaran Shadowfax, which became home and adventure vehicle for three years of cruising the East Coast, the Bahamas, the West Indies, and parts of South America.
Returning to the U.S. with firm ideas for designing serious cruising multihulls, White worked with multihull pioneer Jim Brown to develop Constant Camber boatbuilding, culminating in the construction of the 52-foot trimaran Juniper.
After two years of cruising Juniper from Maine to the West Indies with his wife, Kate, White devoted himself full-time to furthering development of cruising multihulls. He is an associate member of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, has published numerous articles in boating magazines, and holds several patents for inventions pertaining to high-speed recreational sailboats.
When he can get away from his busy design business in South Dartmouth, Massachusetts, Chris, Kate, and young sons Bill and Robert still sail Juniper at every opportunity. In WoodenBoat magazine, Jim Brown called White one of the " . . . few designers . . . offering extremely wholesome new cruising designs for the amateur. To me, such men appear to tiptoe down the tightrope of compromise between cruising and performance."
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1/A Boat for Cruising
Chapter 2/The Specifics of Multihull Design
Chapter 3/The Trimaran
Chapter 4/The Catamaran
Chapter 5/Resisting Leeway
Chapter 6/Rudders and Steering
Chapter 7/Rigs
Chapter 8/Auxiliary Power
Chapter 9/The Specifics of Multihull Construction
Chapter 10/Safety and Seamanship
Appendix A: A Catalog of Production Multihulls
Appendix B: A Review of Multihull Designers
Appendix C: Two Designs from the Author
Index
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