Dictionary Definition
catamaran n : a sailboat with two parallel hulls
held together by single deck
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
ipacregion CanadaNoun
- a raft consisting of two or more logs tied together
- a raft used on the St Lawrence River by lashing two ships together
- a small rectangular raft used in dockyards to protect the hulls of large ships
- a twin-hulled sailing yacht, especially one used for racing; the hulls being connected by a deck carrying the mast, rigging, cockpit and cabin
See also
Translations
twin-hulled yacht
- Chinese: 筏 (fá)
- Finnish: katamaraani
- German: Katamaran
- Greek: καταμαράν (katamarán) , δίγαστρο (ðígastro)
- Italian: catamarano
- Japanese: カタマラン (katamaran)
- Korean: 뗏목 (ddetmok)
- Polish: katamaran
- Portuguese: catamaran
- Russian: катамаран (katamarán)
- Spanish: catamarán
- Thai: (reua bai têe mee lam reua sŏng lam)
- Turkish: katamaran
Extensive Definition
A catamaran (From Tamil
'kattumaram')http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=catamaran
is a type of multihulled boat or ship consisting of two hulls,
or Vakas,
joined by a frame, formed of Akas.
Catamarans can be sail- or engine-powered. The catamaran was first
discovered being used by the paravas, a fishing community in
the southern coast of Tamil Nadu,
India.
Catamarans were used by the ancient Tamil Chola
dynasty as early as the 5th century AD for moving their fleets
to invade such Southeast Asian regions as Burma, Indonesia and
Malaysia.
Catamarans are a relatively recent introduction
to the design of boats for both leisure and sport sailing, although
they have been used for millennia in Oceania, where
Polynesian
catamarans and outrigger
canoes allowed seafaring Polynesians to
settle the world's most far-flung islands.
In recreational sailing, catamarans and multihulls, in general, have
been met by a degree of scepticism from Western sailors accustomed
to more "traditional" monohull designs. The main
source of that scepticism being that multihulls were based on, to
them, completely alien and strange concepts, with balance based on
geometry rather than weight distribution. The second source of that
scepticism is that catamarans work better than traditional designs,
and with less weight, therefore ridiculing the traditional
concepts. In contrast, in the realm of fast ferries, where their
powering characteristics and spacious arrangements are of value,
the catamaran has become arguably the hullform of first choice.
Multihull component terms
There are three terms that describe the components of modern multihulls. The term vaka, like the related terms aka and ama, come from the Malay and Micronesian language group terms for parts of the outrigger canoe, and vaka can be roughly translated as canoe or main hull.Semantically, the catamaran is a pair of Vaka
held together by Aka, whereas the trimaran is a central Vaka,
with Ama on each side, attached by Aka''.
History
The English adventurer and buccaneer William Dampier, travelling around the world in the 1690s in search of business opportunities, once found himself on the southeastern coast of India, in Tamil Nadu on the Bay of Bengal. He was the first to write in English about a kind of vessel he observed there. It was little more than a raft made of logs. ''On the coast of Coromandel," he wrote in 1697, "they call them Catamarans. These are but one Log, or two, sometimes of a sort of light Wood ... so small, that they carry but one Man, whose legs and breech are always in the Water.''While the name came from Tamil, the modern
catamaran came from the South Pacific.
English visitors applied the Tamil name catamaran to the swift,
stable sail and paddle boats made out of two widely separated logs
and used by Polynesian
natives to get from one island to another.
The design remained relatively unknown in the
West for almost another 200 years, until an American, Nathanael
Herreshoff, began to build catamaran boats of his own design in
1877 (US Pat. No. 189,459), namely 'Amaryllis', which immediately
showed her superior performance capabilities, at her maiden regatta
(The Centennial Regatta held on June 22, 1876, off the New York
Yacht Club's Staten Island station. In 1947, surfing legend,
Woodbridge "Woody" Brown and Alfred Kumalae designed and built the
first modern ocean-going catamaran, Manu Kai, in Hawaii. Their
young assistant was Rudy Choy, who later founded the design firm
Choy/Seaman/Kumalae (C/S/K, 1957) and became a fountainhead for the
catamaran movement. The Prout Brothers, Roland and Francis,
experimented with catamarans in 1949 and converted their 1935 boat
factory in Canvey
Island, Essex (England) to catamaran production in 1954. Their
Shearwater catamarans won races easily against the single hulled
yachts.
The speed and stability of these catamarans soon
made them a popular pleasure craft, with their popularity really
taking off in Europe, and was followed soon thereafter in America.
Currently, most individually owned catamarans are built in France,
South Africa, and Australia.
In the mid-twentieth century, the catamaran
inspired an even more popular sailboat, the Beach Cat. In
California, a maker of surfboards, Hobie Alter
produced (1967) the 250-pound Hobie Cat 14,
and two years later the larger and even more successful Hobie 16. That
boat remains in production, with more than 100,000 made in the past
three decades.
The Tornado
catamaran is an olympic class sailing catamaran, with a crew of
two. It has been in the Olympic Games since 1976. It was designed
in 1967 by Rodney March of Brightlingsea, England, with help from
Terry Pierce, and Reg White, specifically for the purpose of
becoming the Olympic catamaran. At the IYRU Olympic Catamaran
Trials, it easily defeated the other challengers.
Other important builders of catamarans are
Austal and Incat
both of Australia, best
known for building large catamarans both as civilian ferries and as
naval
vessels.
Variations
The normal catamaran multihull, powered or not, consists of two Amas separated by two Akas, which may suspend a platform or trampoline between them. They can be of various sizes and recently, they have become very large.The hydroairy
ship appears to be nothing more than an upgraded and enlarged
pontoon
boat with a formed and shaped underplatform. The general
architecture is identical, consisting of two flotation chambers,
for the Amas,
joined by a load carrying platform, which carries the
superstructure.
Invented in 1952 by a Minnesota
farmer, in the rural town of Richmond, MN. Ambrose Weeres had
an idea that if you put a wooden deck on top of two columns of
steel barrels welded together end to end, you would have a sturdy
deck that would be more stable on a lake than a conventional boat.
This was Ambrose Weeres, walking the same idea paths as the early
Polynesians, while proving that the ideas behind the multihull are not all that
counter-intuitive.
These sorts of boats are cheap and easy to make,
require no ballast, and thus have good performance. Although, this
design is almost exclusively restricted to power boats. It is
still, essentially, a catamaran. No displacement is
lost towards ballast, therefore yielding huge operational
efficiencies.
SWATH
The Small Waterplane Area Twin Hull (SWATH) is a hull form used for vessels that require a ship of a certain size to handle in rough seas as well as a much larger vessel. An added benefit is a high proportion of deck area for their displacement — in other words, large without being heavy. The SWATH form was invented by Canadian Frederick G. Creed, who presented his idea in 1938 and was later awarded a British patent for it in 1946. It was first used in the 1960s and 1970s as an evolution of catamaran design for use as oceanographic research vessels or submarine rescue ships. Catamarans provide large, broad decks, but have much higher water resistance than monohulls of comparable size. To reduce some of that resistance (the part that generates waves), as much displacement volume as possible is moved to the lower hull and the waterline cross-section is narrowed sharply, creating the distinctive pair of bulbous hulls below the waterline and the narrow struts supporting the upper hull. This design means that the ship's floatation runs mostly under the waves, like a submarine (the smooth ride of a sub was the inspiration for the design). The result is that a fairly small ship can run very steady in rough seas. A 50-meter ship can operate at near full power in nearly any direction in waves as high as 12 metersThe S.W.A.T.H. theory was further developed by Dr
Thomas G. Lang, inventor of improvements to the semi-submerged ship
(S3) in about 1968. Basically, a SWATH vessel consists of two
parallel torpedo like hulls attached to which are two or more
streamlined struts which pierce the water surface and support an
above water platform. The US Navy commissioned the construction of
a SWATH ship called the 'Kaimalino' to prove the theory as part of
their ship research programme. The Kaimalino has been operating
successfully in the rough seas off the Hawaiian islands since
1975.
Usage and Application
Sailing Beach Catamarans
Although the principles of sailing are the same
for both catamarans and monohulls, there are some "peculiarities"to
sailing catamarans. For example:
- Catamarans can be harder to tack if they don't have dagger boards or centre boards. All sailboats must resist lateral movement in order to sail in directions other than downwind and they do this by either the hull itself or else dagger boards or centre boards. Also, because catamarans are lighter in proportion to their sail size, they have less momentum to carry them through the turn when they are head to wind. Correct use of the jib sail (back-filling the jib to pull the bow around) is often essential in successfully completing a tack without ending up stuck in irons (pointing dead into the wind and sailing backwards, see: No-Go Zone).
- They have a higher speed than other sailboats of the same size. This is because they can have a much larger sail area due to the larger righting moment. They can reach over 1.5 times the speed of the wind.
- Catamarans are less likely to capsize in the classic 'beam-wise' manner but often have a tendency to pitchpole instead - where the leeward (downwind) bow sinks into the water and the boat 'trips' over forward, leading to a capsize.
Teaching for new sailors is usually carried out
in monohulls as they are thought easier to learn to sail, a mixture
of all the differences mentioned probably contributes to
this.
Catamarans, and multihulls in general, are
normally faster than single-hull boats for three reasons:
- catamarans are lighter due to the fact there is no keel counterweight;
- catamarans have a wider beam (the distance from one side of the boat to the other), which makes them more stable and therefore able to carry more sail area per unit of length than an equivalent monohull; and
- the greater stability means that the sail is more likely to stay upright in a gust, drawing more power than a monohull's sail which is more likely to heel (lean) over.
A catamaran is most likely to achieve its maximum
speed when its forward motion is not unduly disturbed by wave
action. This is achieved in waters where the wavelength of the
waves is somewhat greater than the waterline length of the hulls,
or it is achieved by the design piercing the waves. In either case
pitching (rocking horse-like motion) is reduced. This has led to it
being said that catamarans are especially favourable in coastal
waters, where the often sheltered waters permit the boat to reach
and maintain its maximum speed.
Catamarans make good cruising and long distance
boats: The
Race (around the world, in 2001) was won by the
giant catamaran Club Med skippered by Grant
Dalton. It went round the earth in 62 days at an average speed
of eighteen knots.
Catamarans for passenger transport
Cruising Sail Cats
Below a minimum size, about 8m (24 ft.), the catamaran's hulls do not have enough volume to allow them to be used as living space. At the same time, the bridgedeck area isn't sufficiently sized to make effective live-aboard space either. This limits their use to beachcats and day sailers. However, once one gets above that, both the bridgedeck area and the hulls gain sufficient size for use as compartments and navigation decks. These are the cruising catamarans that are being seen more often at yacht clubs that host circumnavigators.- ''There are a lot of folks doing long-distance offshore cruising in monohull yachts of 9m (30 ft.) and less. No responsible designer or multihull sailor would recommend this for a multihull. 12m (40 ft.) is the minum recommended LOA and 15m (50 ft.) is preferred. This size allows adequate storage for necessary cruising equipment and still give you a good turn of speed in comfort and safety. ... If 15m (50 ft.) sounds enormous, remember that the weight of a multihull, of this length, is probably not much more than half the weight of a monohull of the same length and it can be sailed with less crew effort.''
While more popular in the EU, they are gaining
popularity in the US as well due to their superior comfort,
stability, safety, and speed, over monohulls. These boats can
maintain a comfortable 300 nmpd (nautical miles per day) passage,
with the racing versions recording well over 400 nmpd, and they do
this while being unsinkable. This is extremely desirable, for
circumnavigating the world. In addition, they don't heel more than
10-12 degrees, even at full speed on a reach.
- In the Gunboat site there is a video of a Reichel-Pugh 80, racing monohul, making 18.3 kts (knots), while being caught and passed by Safari, a standard Gunboat 62 catamaran, at nearly 30kts in the same breeze!
Even without the actual need to circumnavigate,
these catamaran megayachts allow a level of comfort and life-style
not possible on a monohull sailboat and only previously possible on
large power cruisers. This is their attraction.
Due to the perceived need to retain single-handed
sail handling, 45m is expected to remain the upper limit for this
class of yacht.
The main cruising sail catamaran builders are: -
Seawind Cats, Australia: http://www.seawindcats.com/ -
Fountaine Pajot, France: http://fountaine-pajot.com/ -
Lagoon Catamarans, France: http://www.cata-lagoon.com/ -
Admiral Yachts, South Africa: http://www.admiralyachts.co.za/
- Catana, France: http://www.catana.com/ - Broadblue,
England: http://www.broadblue.co.uk/ -
Multimarine, England: http://www.multimarine.co.uk/ -
Performance Cruising, England: http://www.performancecruising.com/
- African Cats, Holland: http://www.africancats.com/ -
Lightwave Yachts, Australia: http://www.lightwaveyachts.com/
- Maine Cat, United States: http://www.mecat.com/ - Outremer,
France: http://www.catamaran-outremer.com/
- PDQ Yachts, Canada: http://www.pdqyachts.com/ - Antares
Yachts, Canada: http://www.liveantares.com/ -
Alliaura Marine, France: http://www.alliaura.com/ - Stallion
Marine, Australia: http://www.stallionmarine.com.au/
- Scimitar Marine, Australia: http://www.scimitarmarine.com.au/
A more complete list can be found at: http://www.multihull-maven.com/Yards
Mega catamarans
One of the biggest developments over the last decade in the yachting arena has been the rise of the super catamaran - a multihull over 100 feet in length which come in semi-custom and custom designs.Various international manufacturers are leading
the way in this area including Blubay, Yapluka, Sunreef, Lagoon and
Privilege. A catamaran of 150 feet in length is under construction
at Derektor shipyards in Bridgeport, Connecticut. The emergence of
the super or mega catamaran is a relatively new event which is akin
to the rise of the mega or super yacht which was used to describe
the huge growth in luxury, large motor yachts in the French Riviera
and Floridian Coast.
One of the reasons for increased mega catamaran
construction was The
Race, a circumnavigation challenge which departed from
Barcelona, Spain, on New Year's Eve, 2000. Due to the prize money
and prestige associated with this event, four new catamarans (and
two highly modified ones) over 100' in length were built to
compete. The largest, "PlayStation",
owned by Steve
Fossett, was 125' long and had a mast which was 147' above the
water. Virtually all of the new mega cats were built of pre-preg
carbon
fiber for strength and the lowest possible weight. Top speeds
of these boats can approach 50 knots.
See also
- Hokule'a
- International Catamaran Challenge Trophy
- International C-Class Catamaran Championship
- Multihull
- SWATH, another twin hull design
- Trimaran
- Hydrocopter