
"what I needed was a more
sedate boat...."
Extract
from 'Sailing Boats' by Uffa Fox
Being
past fifty I was along way round the
Equator and this makes it difficult
to move swiftly in a 12ft dinghy; so
during the race, as well as the difficulties
in tacking, I also realised that 12ft
and 14ft dinghies were now no longer
"my cup of tea" and what I
needed was a more sedate boat, and while
racing in all this wind I designed the
18ft Jollyboat. I could see in my minds
eye just the sort of boat I wanted.
It
was a boat with all the fun and excitement
of a Firefly, but half as long again,
because I reasoned that if a 12ft dighy
took 12 seconds to go from one tack
to the other an 18ft boat would take
eighteen seconds and I would therefore
have 50 percent more time in which to
get across onto the other gunwhale.
Extract
from 'Inshore Dighy Sailing'
No
single hull dinghy has ever exceeded
the timed speed of the Jollyboat over
a measured distance. Sailed by Charles
Currey in 1954 off Cowes in a Force
5 wind, the Jollyboat covered five cables
at a speed of 13.4 knots. The sea was
one in which the heights of the waves
were between 4ft and 5ft, and it was
not surprising that Ralph Vines later
in the same year put up an average over
three runs of 17.8 knots in the smoother
waters of Edgebaston Reservoir.
Timed trials over a distance have now
gone out of fashion and it is certain
that more recent and improved versions
of the Jollyboat have gone faster since
1954.
Jollyboat
Specification as of 1964 information.
|
Overall
Length 18ft
|
Waterline
Length 17ft 6"
|
|
Beam
5ft
|
Bouyancy
- Airbag or built in
|
|
Construction
- Hot moulded plywood
|
Draught
(Hull) 8"
|
|
Weight
- 300lbs
|
Draught
- Centreboard down 4ft 9"
|
|
Portsmouth
Yardstick 81
|
Sail
Area 160 sq ft
|
|
Designer
- Uffa Fox
|
Builders
- Fairey Marine Ltd
|
|
Price
with sails in 1964 - approximately
£430
|
Extract
from 'Inshore Dighy Sailing'
It
is ironical to reflect that Uffa Fox
designed the Jollyboat as a dinghy which
would give him more room and time in
which to move over the boat when tacking,
advancing years being his reason. It
is typical of the man that the dinghy
then turns out to be the fastest which
he has ever designed.
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|