Hurricane59SX

When fast isn't fast enough!

The Hurricane 5.9 is a one design racing catamaran designed by Reg White in Brightlingsea in response to a Tornado Catamaran owners request that White designed a cat with equal or superior performance to the Tornado of roughly the same length and sail area but did not need to be dismantled for trailing.  The Hurricane was born.

The Hurricane has been enjoying a resurgence in recent years with both old and new members coming into the class creating a good mixture of both experience and enthusiasm.  Everybody is extremely friendly, open and welcoming ensuring that from beginner to winner your experience in this class is an enjoyable one and the main aim is that we all sail better and faster and have a great time.

The new developments that have been made in the last 15 years have revolutionised the boat and it is now easier cat to sail regardless of your age and gender.   As a result we have a wide and diverse membership from teens to seventies and we are attracting many father, son/daughter crews and more and more woman are coming into the fleet all the time.

The Hurricane remains an incredibly smooth, strong, beautifully balanced and stable performer at very affordable price and now the SX  version with bursts of acceleration and far higher top speeds than ever before.   That said both 2 sail Hurricanes and the 3 sail SX sail alongside each other competively at both club level and on the circuit.

You get more bang for your buck with a Hurricane !

Membership Benefits

The Hurricane 5.9 Class Association is a voluntary run association of Hurricane sailors throughout Britain which relies on your subscription so that we can provide all members with the following:-

  • To compete at TT and Open meetings
  • Sailing Chandlery special offers
  • Andark special offers
  • Excellent rates with  GJW Direct Insurance
  • Forward WIP special offers
  • Management of the web site and Social Media
  • A full racing calendar throughout the year
  • Control of the class rules
  • Provides coaching, training, tips and advice
  • Tuning guide by  John Ready & Andy Webb
  • Marketing the Hurricane Class online and through social media
  • Management of class funds
  • Assistance with buying and selling Hurricanes

Membership runs from the 1st January to 31st December of each year  as everyone benefits from all of the above whether they attend open meetings or not your subscription is very much appreciated as it will help us cover the costs of running the association as stated above.

Want to know more? Get in Touch!

  • Yachting World
  • Digital Edition

Yachting World cover

World’s coolest yachts: Tornado catamaran

Yachting World

  • April 20, 2021

We ask top sailors and marine industry gurus to choose the coolest and most innovative yachts of our times. This month, Carolijn Brouwer nominates the Tornado catamaran

tornado catamaran class rules

“The Tornado catamaran is a really cool boat. It was my introduction to high performance sailing and it had a big influence on me in many ways.

“Once you get a taste for it, there is no way back. Sailing the Tornado opened up different doors for me in my sailing career,” says Carolijn Brouwer .

The Tornado catamaran was for many years the fastest Olympic sailing class and was the first catamaran to be introduced to the Olympic Games. It was first sailed in the 1976 Olympic Games and saw its last Olympic appearance in 2008.

tornado catamaran class rules

There was not multihull option for sailing at the Olympic Games in 2012, but the Tornado undoubtedly led the way for the current catamaran class, the Nacra 17, which must be sailed with a female and a male member of the crew.

“Sailing the Tornado is where I got the feel for apparent wind sailing. It’s a pretty big cat in the small boat sailing world with its 20ft length and 10ft width creating decent loads and righting moment.

“Also, the Tornado was the only Open discipline at the Olympic Games but it was extremely male dominated.”

Brouwer helmed for Belgium at the 2008 Games, sailing a Tornado catamaran with crew Sébastien Godefroid. “I hope this showed that being a woman you can compete at a high level and be very competitive against men in a mixed gender configuration – just like the great Paul Elvstrøm did sailing with his daughter.”

Tornado catamaran stats rating:

Top speed: 20 knots LOA: 20ft/6.1m Launched: 1967 Berths: 0 Price: £23,000 Adrenalin factor: 70%

Carolijn Brouwer

A three-time Whitbread/Volvo Ocean Race crew, Carolijn Brouwer is also a three-time Olympian. She was born in the Netherlands and represented the country at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics in first the 470, and then the Europe. She then switched to the Tornado, representing Belgium in 2008, when she finished 12th.

If you enjoyed this….

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Tornado class plans

Discussion in ' Multihulls ' started by corsaro , Mar 1, 2007 .

corsaro

corsaro Junior Member

Hallo, I'm new in this forum, Sorry for my english My question is: There is a plan of tornado class catamaran for home builder? thanks  

joz

joz Senior Member

corsaro said: ↑ Hallo, I'm new in this forum, Sorry for my english My question is: There is a plan of tornado class catamaran for home builder? thanks Click to expand...

Chris Ostlind

Chris Ostlind Previous Member

Yes, There are free plans Corsaro, You can find a full set of building plans for the Tornado at this link: http://www.thebeachcats.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Downloads&file=index&req=viewdownload&cid=6 This is a 16.8 Mb download with photos and full, dimensioned drawings so have fun. Below are a couple of pages from the package as a sample. Chris Ostlind  

Attached Files:

Construction_notes_deck_beam_and_stringers_sized.jpg, photos5_8_sized.jpg.

Roy Reroma

Roy Reroma New Member

Hi!!! I'm new to the group...from the Phils. I was able to but a plan from a fellow member in the yahoo group. It consist of a booklet and blue prints. Most of the pages shown on thebeachcats site are scanned copies of the booklet. Am not sure what the current copyright of this plan but the guy I bought it from said he has never built a boat. So I don't know whether I can make copies.  

TTS

TTS Senior Member

You will also find Tornado plans availble through Gougen Brothers/West System Epoxy. You can either get lines to build using cold molded or plans for tortured plywood construction. Mine is built with the later and it was a six month project from initial planning to completion and launch. It was not that difficult to build and measured in class legal. Mine was 8 pounds over minimun class weight and had I been a little more delicate with the epoxy saturation in the glass and keel it probably would have been below minimum weight. It is still sailing hard 19 years later.  

Rolf Nilsen

Rolf Nilsen Junior Member

The plans on thebeachcats site are the early Jerry Houlton plans and some russian plans. Jerry bought some moulds for cold moulding from Gougeon bros. after and while and stopped doing tortured ply T's. The plans are a collective work and not copyrighted as far as is known. The copyright holder to the russian plans have consented to making the plans available. You can buy Tornado building plans from ISAF, but the sets available on thebeachcats are superior. The measuring templates for the Tornado on the other hand are copyrighted.. If you build a Tornado, you must pay a building fee to the International Tornado association which again pay a fee or used to pay a fee to the designer, Rodney Marsh. I always heard that the Gougeon cold moulded boats with their internal truss framwork was very stiff. I have a friend with a Gougeon boat, but it has gone overweight and still have the old softish crossbeams so it's hard to compare with Marstrom boats. In their day the Gougeon boats where the boats to beat, but that changed with Marstroms boats as it was rumours that it was faster in a chop. Just rumours, but still enough to kill off the wooden boats. Marstroms tornados sell for US$32.000,- ex. VAT and shipping.. Homebuilding for local racing should be a good option if you have the time and a fleet nearby. Buying an old, used, Tornado would be a lot cheaper than homebuilding and buying all the gear new. Alu Tornado masts are found all over the place these days, I have secured two for myself.. TTS, what kind of beams do you have on your boat, and how stiff is it compared to Marstroms? And by the way, I have heard about the Gougeon cedar tornados and plywood tornados, but no strip plank tornados. Why not? Should be stiffer and potentially lighter if built that way?  
Rolf, I think there are two reason for not seeing strip planked tornados out there and possibly more. To build a strip planked hull you will need to loft out the lines, set up bulkheads and build on top of those. It is a much more time consuming process than cold molding was if you were building more than a one off boat. The plywood construction, though limited by the constraints of shaping the hull, was easy, fast, efficient and if done correctly measured in. It also produced very stiff hulls. Probably not as stiff as the Houlton hull, but stiifer than the old Sailcrafts and reg Whites and much stiffer than the Panthercraft hulls. I have Sailcraft of canada beams on my boat and feel that the hulls themselves are close to as stiff as Marstrom hulls, but the beams are not anywhere near as stiff, so I probably have more hull walk then Marstroms do. I have always thought it a shame, that with the advent of composite hulls, that the cold molded boats faded away. I have sailed on the folloing T's. Panthercraft, Sailcraft of canada, Reg White, Marstrom, Mark Lindsay, Gougeon, Houlton, Yankee Laminates, a German & Australian boat (do not know the builders) and quite a few home built from glass/foam/glass to wooden ones. Some have measured in and others did not. Most of the wood or plywood where very stiff hulls, it was the beams and beam boxes that sometimes showed the difference. The other thing that I think that Marstrom got right was the shape. Their boats were faster than the other production boats so Sailcraft closed, Reg White moved on and Paul Stanley of Yankee Laminates could not get sailors to give him a chance. His boats were extremely well built at Concordia yatchs in South Dartmouth, MA. He had done a couple of things differently than Marstrom had and in hindsight he may not have made those chooses. He pushed the freeboard in the bows to the maximum and pushed the flaired the bows at the deck line out to the max as well. With some of the current thoughts in design, he might have gone for a narrower/finer entry. I would like to see at least one or two more builders make headway in the market, but who knows. do you know what is happening with Graham Eeles? Anyway, rolf those are my thoughts.  
And back to the other thought, strip planking. I built a 40' tri (Skyhook" Chris White design, out of Western red Cedar, strip planked. I do not know if you could have gotten the weight down enough in that process to make the boat at or below class minimum. It would be an extremely stiff shell, but I think that you would be working with 3mm strips which would almost be like full scale model making and then inner and outer glass skins. If you were not all the way up there in Norway and over here, I would attempt that project with you.  
Thanks for the nice reply. I also think wood an excellent material which I would like to see more boats made of. Carbon/nomex/foam is very stiff, but wood.. sight.. If the stations was set up correctly for stripping, a builder would not have the uncertainty stressed or tortured ply brings with regards to measuring in and eventual cracks. But what I am really asking for is how 'stiff' in practical sailing a strip planked hull would be compared to glassed ply. I agree that the beams and beam seats are more important for hull walk, but it would be fun to compare with a Marstrom. 4mm strips are used in stripper kayaks and canoes. Easy to work with and probably sands down to about 3.5mm. The Gougeon book also say that panel stiffness is very good compared to plywood. So, would a stripper Tornado be as stiff and light as a Marstrom if beams and beam seats were of comparable quality We are about to commence with no less than three F-16s in strip, so opinions and comments is highly interesting.  
I honestly think that compared to glass/foam/glass that glass/wood/glass is stiffer and stronger. Keep me posted with the details of the three F-16's that you are building. i would be very interested to see how they develop. Again, my feeling is that if the shape can be gotten down correctly and the weight does not become an issue, I would rather have a wood (marstrom) than a glass one.  
To stop weight from becoming a problem epoxy would have to be kept to a minimum. Instead of a plain weave or satin/crowfoot weave, unidirectional glass would be preferable. But as always when homebuilding, it depends on the budget and what can be sourced. I dont know how the Eeles Tornado does. It has been very quiet about that boat lately, perhaps becouse Barney and Walsh have not peaked with it? They finished 16th at the worlds in Cascais recently, but I dont know if they used the Eeles boat. I plan on posting regularly about the F-16 project in my blog, so it will be easy following it.  

Pericles

Pericles Senior Member

Here are a few Tornado websites. http://www.grahameeles.com/ http://www.sailing.org/default.asp?...x5Y12y/MmuuoofDl`9oICJY6/20C,BCxWSG134b0WRNga http://www.swell-catamarans.co.uk/contact/index.html http://www.spitfiresailing.org.uk/data/BSCA class rules.pdf Pericles  
Here goes Tom.. Sorry for bringing an old thread to back to life! Just tought I should let you know that the Blade F-16 project I mentioned now is underways. Will be very interesting to find out what the weight of the finished hull comes down to! There is a blog we update after each building session at: http://woodastic.blogspot.com/  

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TORNADOCAT63 New Member

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November 30, 1999 by Sail1Design Editor Leave a Comment

tornado catamaran class rules

The Tornado was designed in the autumn of 1967 by Rodney March from England, with help from Terry Pierce, and Reg White, specifically for the purpose of being the new Olympic Catamaran, which was to be selected by the IYRU in an Olympic Catamaran Trials. The boat was developed mainly in Brightlingsea, England.

International Status was granted to the Tornado as a result of its outright winning of the IYRU Trials held in England. The next step, adding the Catamaran event to the Olympic program, occurred two years later, with the result that the first Catamaran event, sailed in 1976 in Canada, was sailed in the Tornado. The Tornado is an outstanding example of a class that was designed specifically for Olympic competition that has become a successful International class on its own merits.

2000 Olympic Silver Medalists: Darren Bundock and John Forbes (AUS)The Tornado has since remained unchallenged as the ultimate one-design catamaran. With its modern, stylish rigging and sleek lines the Tornado is quick to catch the eye of any water-drawn on-looker as it speeds across harbors, lakes, and oceans in over 30 countries around the world. With its ability to reach speeds of 15-18 knots upwind and downwind, and 33+ knots reaching, the Tornado is truly the purists’ speed machine.

Over 4,800 Tornados have been built, with 1,200 class association members worldwide. In 2004, on the Saronikos Gulf in Greece, the Tornado will be sailing in its seventh Olympic Games.

Except for refinements in technical details – improvements in hull, sail, and spar technology, better blocks and lines – the Tornado was unchanged from its beginnings in to the early 90’s. Then, as a result of the increasing popularity of other, smaller catamarans, the Tornado class undertook a major development program in 1993. It was specifically to respond to a request from the IYRU to search for ways to improve the public and media awareness of the sport of yachting, and secondarily to answer the possible challengers to its ‘top cat’ role.

Two weeks of intensive on-the-water testing and development took place in Miami, following considerable discussion and planning. Among the participants were the three medalists from Barcelona as well as designer Reg White. The International Tornado Association spent nearly US$22,000 on the testing, evaluation, reporting, and finally balloting process to the class membership, to find the fairest and best ways to improve the class and the sport in ways acceptable to the sailors.

The testing involved 10 standard and fully competitive Tornados, one boat with a larger main and jib, and two boats with a variety of sailplans that included spinnakers of up to 32 sq. M. Fourteen races were run over the testing period in addition to in-line speed and handling evaluations.

As part of the testing process, new courses were also used, most involving a leeward gate.

Following the testing and regatta, the following points were clear; the larger main/jib combination was only marginally faster than the standard rig, and the spinnaker boats were a surprise, only beating the standard rigs in 2 of the 14 races. The ITA then balloted the class membership, with not only the conclusions but also all of the data and the testing procedure, helping to provide insights to the rig selection process.

A two-thirds majority is required by the class constitution to implement any change; this majority was not reached, the class voting against the expense of a change with no real benefit to sailing. Thus the class retained the same sailplan for the next two Olympics. The course changes, giving the possiblity of better spectator access and greater media coverage, received the votes necessary to be adopted by the class.

The Class felt then that the changes in course, rather than changes in the equipment, would have a greater impact on public awareness and media coverage. Courses are adjustable in length for wind, thus giving a fixed racing time for the event, and the shorter-than-before course also tend to keep the boats closer, making the racing more exciting and more easily viewed. The fixed Start/Finish lines also is a help, allowing faster turn-around times between races. The new course formats have been in use in the World Championship beginning in ’93, and have proven popular with both the sailors and committees, and are continued today.

The issue of changes in the boat were revisited in 1999, when the ISAF decided to have a Multihull Evaluation Trials in France to look at “possible replacements” in the Olympic program for the Tornado. At the time, there were a number of technical changes in materials that allowed for better spinnakers, and better control, and there were then a number of successful double-trapeze plus spinnaker catamarans on the market in the Tornado size range – 20 feet – that were becoming popular.

The Trials were interesting. Except for the custom, all-carbon Marstrom 20, the standard Tornado dominated upwind, beating all production challengers from Hobie, Nacra, Mystere, and others. Only by piling on sail area, plus a spinnaker, were any of the challengers able to beat the Tornado around the race course, and even then the advantage disappeared as the wind increased. But the extra athleticism needed to sail with a double trapeze, and the extra visual interest provided by the spinnakers, was undeniable, and the final outcome was that the ISAF decreed that the equipment for the 2004 Olympics would be the “Tornado with double trapeze and spinnaker”, and left it up to the class how to implement the changes.

The class took an approach that allowed some development and testing, with the goal of keeping crew weight in the same range as with the old rig. The final result, approved by the class in early 2001, were both evolutionary and radical. First was a new mainsail with a flat top and more area, providing more heeling moment to compensate for the double instead of single trapeze and help keep crew weights with the same range. Second, done to clear the trampoline to make spinnaker work possible, was to redesign the jib. The new jib had the same area, but was longer on the luff and shorter on the foot to allow it to be sheeted to the main beam. Interestingly, this change, moving the sail area forward, overcame one of the Tornado’s handicaps, tacking, and made this maneuver much easier. The innovation of a self-tacking jib appeared later in 2001, and was quickly adopted by the entire fleet. Finally, of course, there was the spinnaker, and the class set only size limits, allowing the question of spinnaker handling equipment to be settled on the race course. Again, the advantages of spinnaker launching tubes quickly established themselves, and became a class standard. Interestingly, the two biggest boathandling improvements, the self-tacking jib and the spinnaker tubes, were quickly adopted by the classes below the Tornado, especially the International Formula 18, which was becoming the Tornado trainer for future Olympians.

Class website: http://www.tornado.org/

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tornado catamaran class rules

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International Tornado Class Association

For Sale/Wanted

                 Tornado Equipment – GER 211/GER 11 1.Sails :

  • 1 Jib OS3 (new, reserve jib). Euro 800,-
  • 1 Jib, OS3, World champion 2022 m. GRE 1 Euro 500,-
  • 1 Jib, North (Ex. Santi Lange) Euro 300,-
  • 1 Jib Zuccoli (Ex-F.Echavarri) Euro 300,-
  • 1 Main Sail North by Ashby (new, reserve) Euro 2200,-
  • 1Gran Genaker MK IV, blue 2016, (good condition) Euro 1000,-

2.Equipement:

  • 1 pair of Marström Rudderblades Euro 800,-

Contact : Jürgen Jentsch, Tornado GER 211

Tel.+49171-3619869 Email: [email protected]

A Marstrom or any later design tornado in the US.

2003 Tornado, part of the French Tornado team at Athens 2004. The boat has not been sailed for 2 years. Complete boat, very fast.

Boat complete with road trailer and launch trailer with big wheels!

  • 2 complete sets of sails, 1 of which has been sailed less than 15 times.
  • 3 spinnakers in good to great condition for 1
  • Fittings redone less than 3 years ago.
  • Many new parts.
  • Regatta ropes
  • lots of extra hardware (tacktick compass, vest, trapeze belt, etc.).
  • Carbon mast
  • Carbon snuffer

The boat is visible in La Rochelle, France or Bordeaux, France

For more information, please call What’s app at +33 635 109 710 .

Alexandre MOLINA 

https://www.tornado-class.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/IMG_1416-rotated.jpg

For Sale (19 June 2023)

Maström Tornado 02/98 AUT369

  • Regatta clear incl. sail Landenberger
  • Carbon Snuffer
  • Beach Trolly
  • Trampoline in mint condition

Price : 11.500,- Euro

Contact : [email protected]

WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE MEMBER OF THE TORNADO CLASS?

Meet the tornado.

IMAGES

  1. Tornado Catamaran Building Instructions From 1979

    tornado catamaran class rules

  2. Tornado Catamaran sailing lesson, onboard multi cam with live

    tornado catamaran class rules

  3. Tornado Catamaran

    tornado catamaran class rules

  4. World’s coolest yachts: Tornado catamaran

    tornado catamaran class rules

  5. Tornado Catamaran

    tornado catamaran class rules

  6. Catamarans

    tornado catamaran class rules

VIDEO

  1. Tornado Catamaran 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games Highlights

  2. Unlimitedsailing.com Tornado John Gimson and Stuart Bithell

  3. What to do during a tornado in both English and Spanish

  4. Mondial Tornado 2015 /// Yacht Club Carnac

  5. Tornado Catamaran w/spinnaker

  6. The Catmen (Vintage Australian Catamaran Sailing Doco)

COMMENTS

  1. PDF International Tornado Class Rules

    Tornado Class Rules 2016 Version 1.0 5 A.6 CLASS RULES VARIATIONS A.6.1 World Sailing Regulation 10.11 applies. A.7 CLASS RULES AMENDMENTS A.7.1 Amendments to these class rules shall be proposed by the ITA and are subject to the approval of World Sailing in accordance with the World Sailing Regulations.

  2. 2008 International Tornado Class Rules

    2008 TORNADO CLASS RULES 4 A.8.2 In the event of a conflict between the text of a class rule and Section H Official Plans or the measurement form, the text of the class rule shall take precedence over the measurement form and the plans. A.8.3 Any interpretation of class rules required at an event may be made by an inter-

  3. Tornado (sailboat)

    The Tornado is a double handed multihull class recognised as an International Class by the International Sailing Federation. It was used for the Catamaran discipline at the Olympic Games from 1976 to 2008. Design One hull flying. The boat was designed in 1967 by Rodney March from the Isle of Sheppey, England.

  4. The Class

    The Tornado was designed in 1967 by Rodney March from the Isle of Sheppey, England, specifically to be the Olympic Class catamaran. It easily defeated the other challengers in a selection event in England in the same year, and sailed its first Olympics in 1976. Since then, with constant refinement of underwater shapes, construction techniques ...

  5. TORNADO CATAMARAN

    The TORNADO first appeared as winner of the 1967 international "B" class catamaran trials. It was an Olympic class from 1976-2008. The class rules were changed to allow twin trapezes, 'flat head' mainsail, and asym. spinnaker.(2004?)

  6. New Tornado rules adopted

    The International Tornado class had its rule changes adopted by ISAF yesterday (March 1) writes Hugh Styles. This comes as a monumental step forwards for the class in its 30-year history since ...

  7. Tornado Catamaran

    Tornado Catamaran is a 20′ 0″ / 6.1 m catamaran sailboat designed by Reg White and Rodney March and built by Sailcraft Ltd., Marstrom Composite AB, and Windrush Yachts starting in 1966. ... It was an Olympic class from 1976-2008. The class rules were changed to allow twin trapezes, 'flat head' mainsail, and asym. spinnaker.(2004 ...

  8. Class Association

    The Hurricane 5.9 is a one design racing catamaran designed by Reg White in Brightlingsea in response to a Tornado Catamaran owners request that White designed a cat with equal or superior performance to the Tornado of roughly the same length and sail area but did not need to be dismantled for trailing. ... Control of the class rules;

  9. International B-class catamaran

    The B-class was founded during the 1960s and was part of the 4-tier IYRU (now ISAF) approach to divide up the sports catamaran sailing scene into 4 separate groups. These A, B, C and D classes were governed by a very small set of class rules to which each design had to comply. [1] In the beginning it was just: IYRU catamaran classification.

  10. TornadoClass Sailing

    Latest news and videos from the International Tornado Multihull Sailing Class.

  11. World's coolest yachts: Tornado catamaran

    The Tornado catamaran was for many years the fastest Olympic sailing class and was the first catamaran to be introduced to the Olympic Games. It was first sailed in the 1976 Olympic Games and saw ...

  12. Tuning Guide

    5cm down the stern. Swinging trapeze from top of bridle tang to stern of boat. 2. Rig Tension. 36 on Silver Loose Gauge, 27 on Black Loose Gauge. 3. Rotation. Pointing to back of centreboard case for single trapezing and above. To side stay for light winds.

  13. International Tornado Class Association

    International Tornado Class Association. 3,669 likes · 3 talking about this. The ITA is the overarching body for Tornado sailing around the world. Check out our website www.tornado-class.org

  14. The 'A' Class Catamaran

    The 'B' class was a 20ft twin hander with 235ft2 of sail and developed into the Tornado and a few offshoots such as the F18. The 'C' class was another twin, but at 25ft with a 300ft2 rig, has become a super sophisticated monster and the pinnacle of small cat design that races for the Little America's Cup.

  15. Class rules

    File Attachment. 'A' Cat World Sailing Official Rules (updated 01/11/21) Measurers Guidelines 01-01-2023.pdf. IYRU Sail Measurement Instructions. A-Cat Classic Hull Measurement Form-19-12-2022.numbers. A-Cat Classic Hull Measurement Form-19-12-2022.xlsx. A-Cat Hull Measurement Form-19-12-2022.numbers.

  16. International A-class catamaran

    The 'B' class was a 20 ft twin hander with 235ft2 of sail and developed into the Tornado and a few offshoots such as the F18. ... (International A division Catamarans Association). The A-Class rules were expanded over time to prevent the cost of these boats from rising too high and to ensure fairness in racing.

  17. Tornado class plans

    Just rumours, but still enough to kill off the wooden boats. Marstroms tornados sell for US$32.000,- ex. VAT and shipping.. Homebuilding for local racing should be a good option if you have the time and a fleet nearby. Buying an old, used, Tornado would be a lot cheaper than homebuilding and buying all the gear new.

  18. PDF Performance Prediction of The Olympic Variant Tornado Class Catamaran

    The Tornado class catamaran is a high performance yacht sailed by a crew of two people. Designed in 1966 by Rodney March, the Tornado almost instantly became an international class. The Tornado ...

  19. The History

    The Tornado continued to evolve in the 21st century, incorporating modern racing features while maintaining its status as a premier Olympic-class catamaran. Its rich history, competitive spirit, and adaptability have ensured its enduring legacy in the world of sailing.

  20. Tornado

    Tornado. November 30, 1999 by Sail1Design Editor Leave a Comment. From the Class: The Tornado was designed in the autumn of 1967 by Rodney March from England, with help from Terry Pierce, and Reg White, specifically for the purpose of being the new Olympic Catamaran, which was to be selected by the IYRU in an Olympic Catamaran Trials.

  21. Tornado Building Plans :: Catamaran Sailboats at TheBeachcats.com

    A lot has happened with the Tornado since these plans were used to produce competitive boats. Today Marstrms Nomex honeycomb, pre-preg epoxy, autoclaved space-age boats rules the class.A carbon mast has also been added to the boat, further removing the class from it's humble olympic ideals.

  22. For Sale/Wanted

    2003 Tornado, part of the French Tornado team at Athens 2004. The boat has not been sailed for 2 years. Complete boat, very fast. Boat complete with road trailer and launch trailer with big wheels! 2 complete sets of sails, 1 of which has been sailed less than 15 times. 3 spinnakers in good to great condition for 1; Fittings redone less than 3 ...