When we decided to develop a round bilge, swing keel, fifty foot cruising sailboat,
we had a feeling that this was an excellent opportunity to produce a very special
yacht. We opted for a pilot house centre cockpit arrangement, providing maximum
protection for the helmsman against the elements. Besides, we designed the dog
house walls with a 360 degrees vision for the helmsman by means of good sized
windows all around the trunk. The pilot's seat is placed at the right height
to allow for an adequate frontal view of the sea.
Another feature of great appeal is the swing keel. Lifted by synthetic ropes
attached to a jack, the ballasted keel is free to lift in case of a collision.
With part of the ballast installed internally, the Polar 50 possesses an adequate
stability even when the movable keel is retrieved. ( the rudder is fixed behind
a skeg with an aperture for the propeller, and its depth is slightly deeper
than hull's depth, which is a great solution concerning steering control, and,
when the boat is grounded bow first on a sloped shore, the waterline is closer
to a level position, which is quite convenient regarding comfort aboard.
The advantages of a mono-hull over a catamaran are many, being the most important
one, the lower cost of building. Besides, a mono-hull is easier to manoeuvre,
it sails much better when close hauled, it's safer in extremely bad weather
and doesn't become the number one public enemy when approaching a crowded anchorage
or a marina harbour.
We opted for a round bilge hull construction to give a status of elegance to
the design, and the choice of steel or aluminium as a building material is related
to the tough conditions the boat is planned to endure, including collisions
with ice when operating in high latitudes.
At present, with the fantastic improvements in anti-corrosion protection, steel
construction is no more a reason for concern, and it's unquestionable robustness
is an important factor when deciding which material to employ. Nevertheless
aluminium is equally reliable regarding strength, being only slightly more expensive,
once equipment, which represents more than 60% of the cost, remains the same
for both building systems.
The Polar 50 is designed with two lay-out options, one of them intended for
those who want to live aboard and think about using the boat as an office or
small work-shop. This is a world wide trend among sailors and each time more
yachtsmen decide taking this choice. Computer science, free lance jobs, small
repair electrical and electronic servicing and a myriad of other trades can
be performed comfortably aboard a fifty foot Yacht planned for these purposes.
The second version emphasises the main purpose of this design: to be an authentic
adventure machine. This second option is recommended for charter expeditions
as well as prived cruising enterprises. The main differences between the two
layouts are: the first option offers only one access to the interior from the
pilot house. A corridor down below takes the crew from the main saloon to the
fore compartments. A spacious work shop is placed at portside, ahead of the
pilot house.
The other version offers two accesses to the interior from the pilot house,
one for the fore compartments and another ladder descends to the social quarters
of the boat. In both cases a watertight collision bulkhead separates the foc's'l
from the rest of the boat, and the main saloon is the same for both interiors.
The aft main saloon is a very popular arrangement among Yachts that operate
in the charter business in the Southern Ocean or in the North Atlantic and the
Pacific Northwest. If the boat has a lifting keel and a pilot-house, this is
by far the best arrangement, once the keel case occupies an important place
at boat's central area.
The large beam employed in modern designs at the after quarters, as is the case
with the Polar 50, gives room for an ultra spacious saloon, so large that, after
placing the U shaped dinette sofa served by a table where ten guests can share
a meal comfortably, there is still room to spare for an extra wide single berth,
or, you may call it, a double berth for a passionate couple, mainly during a
chilly night. A curtain gives privacy to this bunk, when required. At the opposite
side a library counterbalances this bunk.
We also offer two options for the galley as well as for the engine room, even
so these may be interchangeable. In one of the two engine compartments suggested,
we created an extra room abaft the engine, having in mind the installation of
a larger generator in this place, if wished. Our original idea is the installation
of a 5 to 7 kva power plant at the foc's'le.
The pilot house is another compartment of the boat where there is a sofa for
entertaining, besides all the facilities to navigate the boat from there. As
it has already been stated, the helmsman visibility is excellent, due mainly
to the correct height of the frontal windows above the fore peak. This is a
factor of utmost importance, once the false security given by a pilot house
with an improper visibility may lead to dangerous situations. The lay-out for
the pilot house is different for each version, but in both cases there is room
for a sofa or a pilot berth, a very welcome feature when the boat is navigated
by a small crew.
The boat is specified for an auxiliary propulsion of 80 to 120 horsepower and
the engine room, as is the case with most centre cockpit arrangements , is located
under the cockpit sole.
As is our standard procedure when dealing with Yachts intended to operate in
high latitudes, we placed a heat exchanger inside the rudder skeg, which also
contains the propeller shaft tunnel, in way of a keel cooler.
The keel base is hidden entirely under the pilot house, not consisting any waste
of space. At each side of the case there is room for lockers and installation
of various equipments.
With a trunk that goes from the fore deck to the after quarters, the Polar 50
has the safest deck one can wish for, once there is always support for the feet
when the boat is heeled, either the toe-rail or the trunk side walls. The cockpit
is partially hidden from the bad weather by the pilot house coach-roof, which
extends abaft the house after wall, allowing two persons to sit next to the
pilot house under this coach roof extension. The cockpit steering seat is raised
so the helmsman obtains good visibility when looking forward.
A wide boarding platform, with a gantry installed over it, completes the functionality
of the whole project, besides allowing for the storage of an inflatable there.
The Polar 50 is cutter rigged with the spreaders swept aft. With enough sail
area, to perform well in light wind conditions, this Yacht is a good performer
in any weather.
We have been designing metallic boats for a long time, more precisely since
1981 when we developed the MC37, a modern styled steel yacht with short overhangs,
wide transom, fractional rig and an efficient fin-keel, spade rudder configuration.
The performance of that model was recognised as exceptional for a steel vessel
of that time. Since then, more than thirty yachts of this class were built in
different places, and the plans are still considered up-to-date, and for that
matter are available in our list of stock plans.
Thanks to the successful first trial, we were commissioned by the world famous
navigator Amyr Klink, to produce custom plans for a yacht intended to spend
a winter in the Antarctic continent. Our team, together with Gabriel Dias, a
naval architect who worked with us at that time, developed the polar yacht Paratii,
which not only wintered in Antarctica, but also sailed single handed around
that continent.
During the nineties we developed various stock plans for steel construction,
all of them very well received by the sailing community, and presently we have
more than one hundred metallic yachts sailing or under construction by amateur
and professional builders. ( See in our site the complete line of metallic boat
stock plans )
In 2003 we were commissioned by the Ucranian sailor Aleixo Belov, to design
a 65 foot swing keel yacht to be operated in high latitudes. We made a deal
with our client reserving us the proprietary rights for this work, and the model
is now available as the Polar 65 stock plans. Aleixo began the construction
of his yacht as soon as the plans arrived and in January 2005 the metallic construction
is concluded but still missing the building of the interior and the fitting
out.
After completing the design work for the Polar 65 we went a step ahead with
our line of special yachts intended to stand the harsh punishments of sailing
in waters where ice is routinely found. The Polar 50 is our most recent work
in this field and it's also the most advanced one. This time we went for a round
bilge hull with a lifting keel system which we are already employing in other
models of our metallic boat series. This system is a very simple arrangement
where an hydraulic piston attaches to the ballast upper flange by means of a
synthetic rope, allowing the keel to swing up in case of a collision with an
obstacle without harming the equipment.
Since the beginning of the project we were lucky to have two important supporters
for this work. They were the Brazilian sportsman Julio Fiadi, a person who visited
Antarctica dozens of times and sailed the sub Antarctic waters for the last
twenty years, and Oscar Bentini a boat builder with an outstanding knowledge
about metallic construction, who will build one of these yachts for himself
to be used as a residence, and in a more distant future, to join the charter
business.
Julio Fiadi brought with him an adviser, Oleg Belly, a renowned charter skipper
with many years of service in the Antarctic continent. A physicist by trade
and a boat builder himself, Oleg showed a great interest in our lifting keel
principle, and, at the same time, he contributed with excellent advice about
specific detailing, something to be expected from somebody who has been successfully
operating for so many years in the Southern Ocean.
José Oscar Bentini will begin his construction in January 2005 and we
hope Julio will follow him without delay, so that there will be boats of this
class sailing in the very near future.
|
PRINCIPAL CHARACTERISTICS |
|
|
Length over all |
15,28 m |
|
Load water line |
13,28 m |
|
Beam |
5,08 m |
|
Draught - keel down |
3,25 m |
|
Draught - keel up |
1,40 m |
|
Ballast - swing-keel |
2400 kg |
|
Internal ballast |
3600 kg |
|
Displacement |
24.000 kg |
|
Fresh water tank capacity |
|
|
Fuel tank capacity |
|
|
Standing headroom - saloon |
2,00 m |
|
Standing headroom - Fore cabin |
2,20 m |
|
Standing headroom - Pilot house |
1,90 m |
| Engine power |
80 hp a 120 hp
|
| Sail area |
108 m2
|
| Construction |
Steel or Aluminium
|
SAIL PLAN
PILOT HOUSE
INTERIOR ARRANGEMENT - VERSION B
PILOT HOUSE - VERSION B