The M32 (formerly the Marstsrom 32) is a class of sailing catamaran designed by Göran Marström and Kåre Ljung[1] and first built in 2010 by Marstrom Composite AB.[2] The design and production rights were sold in 2013 to Aston Harald Composite AB led by Håkan Svensson and run by Killian Bushe.[3]
Development | |
---|---|
Designer | Göran Marström & Kåre Ljung |
Location | Sweden |
Year | 2010 |
Builder(s) | Aston Harald Composite AB |
Name | M32 |
Boat | |
Crew | 4-5 |
Displacement | 510 kg (1,120 lb) |
Hull | |
General | 2 hulls |
Type | Multihull |
Construction | Carbon Fibre/Nomex core |
Hull weight | 82 kg (181 lb) each |
LOA | 9.68 m (31.8 ft) |
Beam |
|
Engine type | none |
Hull appendages | |
Keel/board type | daggerboards |
Rig | |
Rig type | Sloop |
Mast length | 16.8 m (55 ft) |
Sails | |
Mainsail area | 52 m2 (560 sq ft) |
Gennaker area | 61 m2 (660 sq ft) |
Total sail area | 113 m2 (1,220 sq ft) |
Design
editThe M32 is a lightweight, all-carbon, high-performance, one-design multihull. Each of the two hulls - constructed of carbon fiber over a Nomex core - weighs 82 kg (181 lb) and features increased forward buoyancy to reduce nose-diving. The boat weighs 510 kg (1,124 lb) overall and carries a sail area of 52 m2 (560 sq ft) resulting in a very high sail area to weight ratio.[3]
The sail plan includes only a high aspect ratio, fully battened mainsail for upwind sailing combined with a furling gennaker for downwind sailing.
Events
editWorld Championship
editGold | Silver | Bronze | |
---|---|---|---|
2017 Marstrand[4] | New Zealand Phil Robertson |
Denmark Jonas Warrer |
New Zealand Chris Steele |
2018 Chicago[5] | China Phil Robertson |
United States Rick DeVos |
Netherlands Pieter Taselaar |
2019 Riva del Garda[6] | United States Don Wilson |
Netherlands Pieter Taselaar |
United States Jennifer Wilson |
2021 Miami[7] | United States Don Wilson |
United States Anthony Kotoun & Joel Ronning |
Sweden Richard Goransson |
2022 Cascais[8] | United States Don Wilson |
United States Dan Cheresh |
United States Larry Phillips |
|}
See also
editSimilar sailboats
References
edit- ^ "THE M32 ONE DESIGN – A 32 FOOT CARBON CATAMARAN". M32 ICA. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ^ Sheahan, Matthew (6 January 2016). "M32 catamaran – a high-speed cat for the World Match Racing Tour". Yachting World. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ^ a b Heppell, Toby (30 June 2016). "Boat test: The M32". Yachts & Yachting. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ^ http://m32world.com/m32worldchampionships/
- ^ http://m32world.com/results/results-archive/
- ^ http://m32world.com/results/results-archive/
- ^ http://m32world.com/results/results-archive/
- ^ http://m32world.com/results/results-archive/
External links
edit- Media related to M32 at Wikimedia Commons
- M32 World
- M32 International Class Association