Robert Phillips, managing director of Doyle Sailmakers BVI in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, reports that funding and commitment are in place for a venture to build the Rogers 29 power catamaran in the BVI.
The photos show models of the powercat designed for service as a recreational day boat, or fishing or dive boat, or as a water taxi or tour boat.
Lamination started in early September with a view to splashing the first boat this month for use as a mark boat for the Mooring Interline Regatta. The first boat will be powered by two Tohatsu 50-hp two-stroke outboards.
Here's background on the Rogers 29 project as outlined by Carol Bareuther in an article for All At Sea, a regional boating publication in the Caribbean:
Some
of the best ideas in boating are born over a beer. Such is the case with a new
boat building venture in the British Virgin Islands that will see commercial
production of a lightweight, fuel efficient, power catamaran starting this
fall.
Richard
Wooldridge of Island Yacht Management (IYM) explains the vessels conception, “A
few years ago, Bob Phillips raced with designer O.H. Rodgers on ‘Three Harkoms’
at the Rolex Regatta. They were enjoying a beer or two in Christmas Cove when
Morgan Avery showed up on his ‘Flying Carpet’, a converted Prindle 19. Bob was
impressed with the efficiency of the craft, speeding along with no wake and
only a small outboard. He said to O.H. ‘design me a 26-foot version of that’
and that’s how it all got started.”
There
hasn’t been any production boat building on Tortola since the early 1990s when
construction of the popular ‘Tortola Dinghy’ ceased as charter companies
started to use inflatable dinghies in their place.
Construction
of the ‘Rodgers 29’ started last October when a full sized hull model was
created. This was used to create a ‘mold’ in which the hulls will be produced.
Molds for the vessel’s structural beams and other sections of the vessel are
now being made. IYM plan to have hull #1 launched in time for the ‘Interline’
regatta in mid October. Hull #2, which will be available for sale should be
finished mid November. The plan is to build one vessel per month thereafter
O.H.
Rodgers is a renowned yacht designer who has a history of success over the last
30 years with designs that include ‘A’ class cats, cruising multihulls and a
range of racing monohulls. The ‘Rodgers 29’ is a high-tech build using
composite materials to make it strong while remaining as light as possible.
Wooldridge
explains, “The design brief was to produce a fuel-efficient boat that is
capable of taking the rough trade wind conditions we experience here on the
nose. She should be able to take 6 to 8 adults around the islands at speeds up
to 28 knots using under 6 gallons of gas per hour. This will be possible
because we will only be using 50 or 60 HP outboards, which are extremely fuel
efficient and relatively inexpensive. A conventional 30-foot power boat would
typically be powered by twin 250 HP outboards that swallow up to 12 gallons per
hour each. The vessel will have a 150-mile range with full tanks giving it true
‘inter island’ capability in moderate sea conditions.”
The
build is all epoxy.
Perhaps
the best description of this new power cat came when veteran USVI multihull
sailor, John Holmberg, came for a look at the hull. “He
said ‘it’s a 30-foot Tornado with chines’,” says Wooldridge. “Add a bridge
deck, a console, two outboards and a hard top and you’ve got it!”
IYM
sees a large market for its new power cat.
“We
believe that this new power cat will fill a void in the current leisure and
work boat markets,” says Wooldridge. “There is simply nothing like it being
produced anywhere, its uses are endless from dive boat to water taxi or chase
boat or just having fun around the islands with family and friends aboard.”
“The
intention is to keep the first boat here to promote the product and to
generally assess the performance under a full range of conditions,” Wooldridge
says. “We plan to tour the Caribbean with #1 to show her off. She will
certainly be at all the major regattas.”
IYM’s
partners in the project are Doyle Sails BVI and the Golden Hind Chandlery.