This year we’re crewing on Pete the Knot‘s Marcon Cutlass 27 Mark III ‘Windchat’. Built by his dad and two mates in 1973 two years before he was born, Pete bought it in 2015 for £10 and has spent considerably more restoring it in the boatyard she was built in. Continue reading Round the Island 2016 on Windchat
Tag Archives: cutlass 27
Pete’s Cutlass 27 ‘Windchat’ during the 2016 Round the Island Race just off Hurst Castle
The Cutlass 27 was designed by Eric White of Marine Construction ‘Marcon’ and Alan Hill, one of the pioneers of GRP yacht design, who was responsible for a wide range of successful designs including the Trident 24, Sabre 27 and Moody Halberdier. The first boats, originally called just the ‘Cutlass’, were built in 1967/8, and within two years over 100 had been sold. As was common with boat builders in the 1960s/70s Marcon always offered the boats either as completed boats or as kits for home completion.
In 1974 the design was altered to increase headroom, with a slight increase in ballast and displacement, plus other minor alterations, and renamed the ‘Cutlass 27’, these boats remaining in production until around the mid-1980s, though the last of these boats were sold only as bare hulls or kits, as Marcon were concentrating on producing bigger boats. About 200 of these boats in total are believed to have been built.
The Cutlass hull design is clearly a folk boat development, with a short counter stern added, and shares the speed and sea keeping abilities of the breed. She has a ballast ratio of over 50%, and by modern expectations quite narrow beam.
Restoration of ‘Windchat’ 40 years after my dad built her
My father bought (in kit form) and built Windchat with two of his friends in 1973 three years before I was born. They took her to Guernsey on the first maiden voyage proper and some 40 years later I embarked on her restoration. Continue reading Restoration of ‘Windchat’ 40 years after my dad built her
Windchat’s 1973 birth and maiden voyage
Written by my father, David May
I was on duty at my stand at the London Boat Show in January 1971 when I was approached by my two friends Roger and Philip. They had dreamed up the idea that we should sell our respective small plywood cruising yachts and together form a syndicate to purchase a larger deep-keeled yacht. Continue reading Windchat’s 1973 birth and maiden voyage