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Sagamore
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| LOA |
80'
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| Beam |
17'
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| Draft |
14'
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| Displ. |
50,000
lbs
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| Designer |
Langan
Design
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| Construction |
Pre-preg carbon w/Nomex honeycomb core
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Click
for full-size plan
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Click
for full-size plan
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Deep
foils require expert composite
engineering
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Sagamore
on her way to a Bermuda
Race win
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Sagamore
was built with a Nomex
honeycomb core
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Click
images for full-size view
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The loads
on an ILC Maxi are tremendous
-- and are second only to the
level of competion in the Maxiboat
class. The challenge presented
to New England Boatworks was to
build a boat that could do battle
for the IMS Maxiboat World Championship
against the likes of established
kingpins such as Boomerang,
Morning Glory, Sayonara, and
more. Sagamore has proven
a top contender since her launch
in 1999, taking line honors in
the 2000 Bermuda Race, winning
the Middle Sea Race in 1999, and
placing first (1999) and second
(2000) in Antigua Race Week. The
yacht has been campaigned hard,
from the Fastnet Race to the Cape
Town to Rio Race, and her structure,
a credit to NEB's engineers, composite
specialists, and builders, has
come through every challenge with
flying colors. |
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Sagamore
is the first "new generation"
IMS boat to be built
utilizing phenolic honeycomb core
(1-1/4" thick), and through
years of very tough campaigning
the yacht has shown no signs of
the post-curing or delamination
problems that have plagued some
other composite-built racing machines.
We attribute that to our proprietary
techniques for handling pre-preg
carbon and Nomex. After ramping
up the "oven temperature"
for five hours, the 80-foot hull
was carefully "cooked"
in NEB's post-curing enclosure
for 12 hours at 80 degrees Centigrade
(the IMS legal limit). Precise
monitoring of the temperature,
using an array of sensors implanted
in the laminate, insured that
a complete mechanical and chemical
bond between the carbon and Nomex
was achieved.
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