Log in or Sign up

You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser .

SKOOTA 28/36 Power cat

Discussion in ' Boat Design ' started by daruffians , Jun 28, 2013 .

daruffians

daruffians Junior Member

Good day brethren.. I would like to ask if someone in this Forum had built or building or have seen or any information on WOODS DESIGN Power Catamaran Skoota 28 or Skoota 36. Thank you guys. Edwin  

tomas

tomas Senior Member

I assume that you've already been to www.sailingcatamarans.com The designer, Richard Woods , is a member here as well. Here's the latest Skoota video: Looks great. for more Skoota videos on Richard's YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/WoodsDesigns/search?query=skoota 28  
Yes i have, I am thinking of buying the plan. But would like some opinions on the design and the sea worthiness of the design.  

John Perry

John Perry Senior Member

Looking at the video, if this were a sailing catamaran I would think that the bridge deck clearance is on the low side. Can power catamarans manage with less bridge deck clearance than sailing catamarans? And if they can, is this because they tend to have narrower overall beam for the same length?  

Mr Efficiency

Mr Efficiency Senior Member

Given that the demihulls are asymmetric, I wonder why all that beam was needed.  
I wonder if someone in this forum actually build a skoota design and used it in open water. Also, instead of using an outboard, was wondering if you could use an inboard diesel engine on boat hull.  

groper

groper Senior Member

Richards skoota designs are only very recent, I think there is only 1 skoota 28 has been launched to date, it's the one in the video, and it was only launched about 3 months ago. I'm not aware of any skoota 36 that's been launched yet. And yes, with narrower beam, the bridge deck clearance can be lower.  

Richard Woods

Richard Woods Woods Designs

Thank you for your interest in my Skoota designs. As Groper says, and as I write on my website, the Skoota 28 and 36 are new designs. Only one Skoota 28 is in the water (mine, in BC, Canada). One other is building (in Europe) and two Skoota 36's (one in BC, one in the UK). However about 40 of my smaller Skoota 20 and 24's are building or launched. I don't know the conditions in the Philippines, but the Skoota 28 is certainly seaworthy enough for the coastal cruising most people do. Including going to the Bahamas and island hopping south. Or crossing the English Channel and going through the French Canals to the Med. Obviously one of the major limitations for all small powerboats is their range under power. Having said that, a powercat is no less seaworthy than a similar proportioned sailing catamaran (more so really, as it cannot capsize). So anywhere it is safe to take a 28ft sailing catamaran you could take a 28ft powercat. Two of my 28ft Gypsy sailing catamarans have made Pacific crossings, and several of my 30ft Windsongs and Sagittas have crossed the Atlantic. So the implication is the Skoota 28 could do the same if it could carry the fuel In an ideal world every catamaran would have a very high bridgedeck, but that is clearly not possible, because of aesthetic reasons and also because of windage plus the fact that, as the freeboard increases, so does weight. So a high bridgedeck clearance means a slower boat. It's all a compromise. But I have found that powercats don't need the same clearance as sailing catamarans. In part because they don't heel - which effectively reduces the clearance. And for sure the ride is way more comfortable than in a conventional planing powerboat One reason for the Skoota 28 wide beam is to fit in the accommodation. One reason for the Skoota 28 narrow beam is so that it fits in a standard 14ft wide slip I like the twin outboards. More reliability, more manouverability, no smell in the accommodation, quieter. Cheaper to install and repair (I take the engine to the mechanic, not the other way round) I have only taken a couple of people out for test rides, one bought a Skoota 36 plan. The other offered to buy my boat on the spot for 20% more than we paid for it. I said "But we haven't cruised it yet ourselves". Our plan is to go to Desolation Sound in a couple of weeks time, and then cruise the San Juans and Puget Sound in Sept/Oct. Next year, after a summer heading north towards Alaska, we will trailer it to the Great Lakes and do a "Great Circle" cruise, stopping off for a couple of years in the Bahamas. I will be talking about things like bridgedeck clearance, fuel consumption, seaworthiness of powercats etc in my seminars at the Port Townsend Wooden Boat Festival in September this year where my Skoota 28 will be on display. It will also be at the Vancouver BC Wooden Boat Show Aug 22-25 I hope that helps the debate Richard Woods of Woods Designs www.sailingcatamarans.com  
Richard, Thank you for the information. Please if you could email me the price of the plan @ daruffians at gmail dot com. or [email protected]  

srupp9271@yahoo

srupp9271@yahoo New Member

"Great Circle" i'm responding to richard woods message from 06-30-2013. you said that you might do the"Great Circle" in i guess 2014. i live in key west fl and if you plan on stopping in key west i would love to check out the boat. i'm especially interested in a boat for the bahamas like the skoota 36 . thanks!  
Thank you for your post and interest in my Skoota 28 powercat As always, my plans never quite work out as I hope. But in my defense, we did get to the Bahamas and Florida last winter - but it was on a Transit 38 catamaran. We have now motored about 1200 miles on our Skoota, and quite a number are now building, with a lot of interest in the PNW. Sorry, but it won't be this year that we head south and east, maybe next year though Meantime, you can catch up with our cruising here http://woodsdesigns.blogspot.ca/?view=magazine Richard Woods of Woods Designs www.sailingcatamarans.com  
i would love to get some more information on the skoota 36. I think before I could make up my mind I would actually have to see the boat and hopefully take it for a sea trial. I would be happy to pay for that. In the mean time do you think you might be able to have some pictures of the boat as soon as one is finished and more detailed specifications like weight of the boat, displacement, draft (i saw the draft is i think 53 cm but is that with engine up or down?) and a list of materials needed to figure out the cost of the boat and how many man hours on average it takes to build the boat. I did read on your webpage that 2 sets of plans for the skoota 36 have been sold one in Canada and one in the UK. If your customers in Canada would be willing to show their boat I would be happy to pay for that. Otherwise any more information on the skoota 36 would be highly appreciated. Thanks.  

Capt. Peter Wilcox

Capt. Peter Wilcox Junior Member

Hi Richard, Do you know the location of the Skoota 28 that was built in Canada? We'll be sailing far up there for much of the summer, or could make a driving trip up from Portland (our home port) well before that. I have contacted Joshua but not heard back from him yet; sounds like he is a probably not going to want to stop his furniture work anyway. We have already built one boat with the NW Boatschool in Port Hadlock and would love to do so again. We'll need to get in the queue soon if we are going to build a Skoota 28/30 starting next fall, so I'd like to actually see one ASAP. Or, as I am turning 75 this year and have been planning to take a rare and special faraway trip, we might be able to come there to see yours in the fall. I have never been to Cornwall although that is supposed to be where my great-great grandfather emigrated from, so that would be special by itself. My real hope for that trip is to go with my wife to Norway and Sweden to ride electric and H2 ferries, as I am a ferry fanatic and have been working on getting electric passengers ferries on our two navigable rivers here for over 20 years, and am still at it as a serious 5-year volunteer with the Friends of Frog Ferry...Thank you.  

fallguy

fallguy Senior Member

Capt. Peter Wilcox said: ↑ Hi Richard, Do you know the location of the Skoota 28 that was built in Canada? We'll be sailing far up there for much of the summer, or could make a driving trip up from Portland (our home port) well before that. I have contacted Joshua but not heard back from him yet; sounds like he is a probably not going to want to stop his furniture work anyway. We have already built one boat with the NW Boatschool in Port Hadlock and would love to do so again. We'll need to get in the queue soon if we are going to build a Skoota 28/30 starting next fall, so I'd like to actually see one ASAP. Or, as I am turning 75 this year and have been planning to take a rare and special faraway trip, we might be able to come there to see yours in the fall. I have never been to Cornwall although that is supposed to be where my great-great grandfather emigrated from, so that would be special by itself. My real hope for that trip is to go with my wife to Norway and Sweden to ride electric and H2 ferries, as I am a ferry fanatic and have been working on getting electric passengers ferries on our two navigable rivers here for over 20 years, and am still at it as a serious 5-year volunteer with the Friends of Frog Ferry...Thank you. Click to expand...
  • Advertisement:
Thanks for the info and thoughts; I agree that the 28 is the one for me/us. I hadn't heard that Richard's 28 was destroyed; was this by a fire or striking a reef in the Bahamas....? I'd willingly drive up to Vancouver to see a 32 or 36, if I couldn't find a 28. Can you provide any way to contact one of those owners, would one be you? Could come next weekend.  

Silas McGhee

Small Power Catamarans?

serdarbas

Slipperlaunch electric pod engine power

Nathan Hill

Looking for custom power catamaran boat builder

fpjeepy05

Howard Chapelle 34ft Downeast Looking Powerboat

DCockey

SNAME Power Boat Symposium, 14 October 2024, Norfolk, Virginia

High72

Solar powered boat

Ilikebigboatsandicanotlie

Basic rules for a 38' power cat design

Pete Smith

Small electric powered catamaran for safety boat use?

lobsterman

Power Multihull catagory?

CapBam

Houseboat repowering

  • No, create an account now.
  • Yes, my password is:
  • Forgot your password?

Boat Design Net

Projects: Constructing a 40ft catamaran with WEST SYSTEM epoxy

Work doesn’t necessarily slow down after retirement, as engineer Martin Ellison proved when he left his teaching post at the age of 59 and set about building his first boat. What started as some prompting from his wife to find a meaningful project evolved into the idea of building a 40ft catamaran. Martin tells epoxycraft how it all came about.

I have always loved being on or near the water and wanted to have a boat of my own. As someone who has renovated a few houses in the past, I wasn’t daunted by the idea of building a wooden boat from a set of plans, although I’m not sure it was the scale of project my wife had in mind!

Bulkhead frames and structural beams

I chose to build a catamaran because I wanted the space and stability; preferring a power cat, I searched online for some designs and went for the Skoota 36 ( Woods Designs ). This is a relatively simple timber and plywood design sheathed in fibreglass, although I have slightly modified the design to increase the length to 40ft so that I could enlarge the accommodation space in the hulls.

When I began in earnest in September 2014 I didn’t even have a boat shed, so that was the first project. It was ready for action by March 2015 and I have been steadily working on the boat for the past nine months.

I’ve used WEST SYSTEM  epoxy all over… and found its strength and versatility to be ideal.

For the build I’ve used WEST SYSTEM® epoxy all over – jointing, filleting, waterproofing and sheathing and have found its strength and versatility to be ideal for this project.

Frames joined with stringers

I’ve mainly used WEST SYSTEM 105 Epoxy Resin® with WEST SYSTEM 205 Fast Hardener® . In addition, I’ve combined the epoxy mix with WEST SYSTEM 403 Microfibres and WEST SYSTEM 409 Microsphere Blend® to ensure all the gaps have been thoroughly filled. When it came to sheathing, I used 300g and 600g Episize™ Biaxial Fabric and 300g woven WEST SYSTEM 787 Aramid Fabric® to provide extra protection below the waterline.

Hull sheathed in glass cloth and epoxy

The boat build so far has taken just over 1100 hours. It’s a big boat and there’s a lot of work – mainly woodwork – involved in completing each stage. I’m enjoying it though, it’s very rewarding and most of the build has gone pretty smoothly.

As luck would have it there is another Skoota 36 being built in Canada which is about one year ahead of me and the owner has very kindly shared his build photos, which has been a great help. People say it looks very difficult but in practice it isn’t – it’s simply a case of following the plans and having the confidence to get on with it.

There’s still a bit of a way to go but I’m really looking forward to turning over so we can finalise the internal layout and then getting her in the water and cruising in her.

Our thanks to Martin Ellison for sharing his story. We wish him well and will be following him closely as he completes his build.

If you would like more information about this project you can follow the build on https://my-new-cat.weebly.com

Back to projects

g/flex in use banner

G/flex® 650 vs. 655: Choosing the Right Epoxy Adhesive

BOAT in process of getting restored using west system epoxy

Swiss Couple’s Boat Restoration Rescue?

skoota 36 catamaran

What Can You Do With a WEST SYSTEM® Epoxy A Pack?

skoota 36 catamaran

Boat Builder Central

Builder forum.

forum header image

  • BBC Forums Builder's Progress and non technical messages Builder's Power Boats

Woods Skoota 32DM

  • Jump to page:

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 2:54 pm

Re: Woods Skoota 32DM

Post by narfi » Sat Aug 12, 2017 3:27 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 3:51 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 3:56 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 4:01 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 4:03 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 5:09 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 5:13 pm

Post by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 5:24 pm

Post by pee wee » Sat Aug 12, 2017 5:26 pm

Return to “Builder's Power Boats”

  • Mini FAQ (Read Only Forum)
  • ↳   Read this first
  • Plans and Building
  • ↳   Questions before purchasing the plans and announcements..
  • ↳   Power Boats
  • ↳   Small Boats
  • ↳   Sail Boats
  • ↳   Free Plans and others
  • ↳   Woods Designs and Multihulls
  • Boat Repair
  • ↳   Cracker Larry's Corner: Boat Repair and Rebuild Support
  • ↳   Resins, Fiberglass and Paint
  • ↳   Core Materials: Plywood, Foam core and Honeycomb
  • ↳   Sterling
  • ↳   EMC paints/coatings
  • Miscellaneous
  • ↳   Anything else and for sale. . .
  • ↳   Forum Software & Site Bug Reports
  • ↳   Tool Exchange
  • ↳   Builder Meets and Get Togethers
  • ↳   Builders' Tips, Tools, and Tricks of the trade
  • Builder's Progress and non technical messages
  • ↳   Builder's Power Boats
  • ↳   Builder's Sail Boats
  • ↳   Builder's Small Boats
  • ↳   Finished Boats
  • Read this first
  • Questions before purchasing the plans and announcements..
  • Power Boats
  • Small Boats
  • Free Plans and others
  • Woods Designs and Multihulls
  • Cracker Larry's Corner: Boat Repair and Rebuild Support
  • Resins, Fiberglass and Paint
  • Core Materials: Plywood, Foam core and Honeycomb
  • EMC paints/coatings
  • Anything else and for sale. . .
  • Forum Software & Site Bug Reports
  • Tool Exchange
  • Builder Meets and Get Togethers
  • Builders' Tips, Tools, and Tricks of the trade
  • Builder's Power Boats
  • Builder's Sail Boats
  • Builder's Small Boats
  • Finished Boats

50th Anniversary Collectors Issue - September/October Issue No. 300 Preview Now

skoota 36 catamaran

The Skoota 28 is a 28 ft plywood demountable coastal cruising power catamaran for a couple. Ideal for the European canals, the PNW or the Great Loop. It will demount for transport on a flat bed lorry/truck or could even be towed by a large car but should not be considered “trailable”. When disassembled it does not need a “wide load permit” for transport

Design Specifications

Richard Woods of Woods Designs [email protected] www.sailingcatamarans.com

Foss Quay, Millbrook, Torpoint, Cornwall, PL10 1EN, UK

skoota 28

ACCESS TO EXPERIENCE

Subscribe today.

Publishing dynamic editorial content on boat design construction, and repair for more than 40 years.

1 YEAR SUBSCRIPTION (6 ISSUES)

Print $39.95, digital $28.00, print+digital $42.95, from plans & kits.

Profile & Deck

Okwata 15-26

NINFA

From the Community

7’ 3” Paul Gartside Lapstrake Norwegian Pram

7' 3" Paul Gartside Lapstrake Norwegian Pram

WoodenBoat School Fundamentals of Boatbuilding class student build.

2016 First Light Monomoy 24'

2016 First Light Monomoy 24'

Seabreeze is well-maintained and in like new condition.

1970 LUZIER 26 CUSTOM CENTER CONSOLE

1970 LUZIER 26 CUSTOM CENTER CONSOLE

1970 GEORGE LUZIER CUSTOM. RUM RAT is one of five 26 enter consoles made by Luzier.

Historic  NC Core Sound Sharpie

Historic NC Core Sound Sharpie

logo

production Strider 24

skoota 36 catamaran

plywood Romany 34

skoota 36 catamaran

lightweight 14ft Zeta mainhull

skoota 36 catamaran

Strike 15 trimaran at speed

skoota 36 catamaran

28ft Skoota in British Columbia

skoota 36 catamaran

10ft 2 sheet ply Duo dinghy

skoota 36 catamaran

24ft Strider sailing fast

skoota 36 catamaran

36ft Mirage open deck catamaran

  • All Our Designs
  • For new visitors
  • About Richard Woods
  • Useful Articles
  • Testimonials
  • Year Reviews (1998-2014)
  • Plan Updates
  • Links to Owners and Suppliers
  • Consultancy Service
  • Boats for Sale
  • Blog and Facebook Posts
  • Our Cruising Blog (updated Jan 26th 2020)
  • Download Eclipse logbook (300 page pdf)
  • Download Newsletters 1992-2002 (pdf)
  • Download Year Reviews 2002-14 (pdf)
  • Download FAQs (pdf)
  • Download Boat Tests (pdf)

Introduction to the Skoota Power Catamarans

This article is based on a talk I gave at the 2013 Port Townsend Wooden Boat Festival, which is in the USA, so it was given to an American audience. I began by talking briefly about my career and my introduction to sailing in the Pacific North West, which you can read elsewhere on this site, so I won't repeat it here, and then I said :

"So that's a brief introduction about me, I'll talk more tomorrow about my multihull sailing and design experiences.

Right now I am going to talk about what might make an ideal PNW cruiser. In the last 7 years my wife and I have owned two sailing trimarans, a sailing catamaran and 2 powercats in the PNW. I've also sailed monohulls around here, not just the Downeast38, but several others, including a Thunderbird in the Shipwrights regatta held here in February, and most recently I raced a wooden 6m, built in 1938, during the Vancouver wooden boatshow. So I’ve been able to sail all sorts of boats in the PNW

We have a waterfront summer house on Saturna Island, which is one of the Canadian Gulf Islands. So even when we are not cruising we spend a lot of time looking out over the Strait of Georgia.

I think everyone knows that winds are light here for most of the summer, so much so that for weeks at a time anything over even 10 knots is a rare event.

skoota 36 catamaran

Unlike, say, San Francisco, where one really only sails in the Bay, here in the PNW there are many places to cruise to, even if you just daysail. For you can go hundreds of miles, anchoring each night, yet staying in sheltered water the whole time. After all, the most popular cruising boats round here are actually kayaks, with their paddlers camping on beaches at night.

A kayak is very limited to wind and seastate, over 15 knots and they go into survival mode. Which really proves how benign the local weather conditions are. You don't see kayaks in the UK, it's just too rough and windy.

To get to more distant cruising grounds even multihull sailors like ourselves spend a lot of the time motoring. We got frustrated drifting around until say 4pm when, 10 miles short of our anchorage, we'd start the engine and motor in for the night.

skoota 36 catamaran

For unlike the UK and the east coast you cannot sensibly sail at night, there are just too many dead heads and logs. Having said that one of my most memorable sails was in the Swiftsure race, sailing Bad Kitty at 22 knots through Race Rocks at 1am on a pitch black night.

Again, if we were cruising in the UK, or on the east coast of the US, we could have a trailable boat and drive to our favorite cruising area. But up here, once you're north of Lund there are no coastal roads, period, so you have to get further north in your own boat.

Even if you are live aboard cruisers you still have limited time, because the summer season is short and few people want to leave their boat in Alaska for the winter. Unfortunately the Canadians have now made it difficult to leave your boat in Canada without paying an 8% sales tax. So you have to allow time to come home again.

So on a long trip, and with limited time, you need to make fast passages, so you can get to your destination quickly and then relax and enjoy yourself. And unfortunately round here you cannot do that under sail. After a lot of soul searching, for after all I've been a keen sailor for 50 years, we eventually decided the best thing to do was to have a fast daysailing boat for the days when there is wind and we wanted fun on the water, and at the same time to have a powerboat for cruising further afield.

OK I know you can motor a sailboat. And it is often fuel efficient to do so when compared to a powerboat. Even so I cannot see why someone would be motoring their sailboat downwind in 15 knots of wind, especially early in the day, as so many people seem to do. I mean if they don't sail in ideal conditions then when do they? Maybe it's simply that having a sailboat was a romantic dream and it's just too much effort to sail one efficiently. Or maybe they find they are more comfortable driving a boat like you do a car, rather than actually learn how to sail. I don't know, any ideas? but wouldn't they be better off with a powerboat in the first place?

Before I describe the boat we now have, and the reasons for choosing it, I want to digress for a moment and talk about yacht design in general.

Ocean going boats have always done two things. Carry lots of people or carry a heavy cargo. Much of boat's development happened in Europe where generally it is easier to move people by land, not sea. So most boats there were designed to carry cargo. Thus they were big and heavy and relatively slow. Yachts developed from these boats and so also tended to be heavy and slow as that was what people expected from a boat.

The place where it is impossible to move people by land is the Pacific ocean, and it was there that multihulls were developed, as they are ideal people movers with a big level deck space for living onboard and easy beaching anywhere.

skoota 36 catamaran

People are a light cargo and want to get to their destination quickly, which is still as true today as it was 2000 years ago.

You all know the phrase “it's not rocket science” meaning it's not the ultimate in technology and design. Well I say “rocket science is not rocket science, but yacht design is”

I went to the Kennedy space centre a few years ago and got talking to one of the Saturn rocket designers.

skoota 36 catamaran

I asked him what he would change if going to the moon today. He said, “only the computer”. The rest was basically just a big fuel tank, while I was surprised at how small and simple the engines were. I believe the Russians still use the same basic rocket that Gagarin used. The space shuttles first flew over 30 years ago, so were obviously designed much earlier. The supersonic Concorde aircraft was designed in the late 1950's

Now think of the changes made to yachts, and especially to multihulls since 1968

It is easy to design something static, like a bridge or a building. It doesn't have to move, or even float. So you can put a steeple in a corner of a church and not worry about it falling over.

skoota 36 catamaran

Once in space a space ship has no loads, no gravity and only one atmosphere between the interior and outer space. Even a static houseboat is harder to design – it has to float level for a start.

Harder still to design are moving things, like a car or plane. They not only have to keep their shape and support a load, just like a static building does, but they also have to move efficiently.

Hardest of all are what I call “interface vehicles” like boats, that work in two mediums at the same time. Air and water in our case. Planes don't usually fall out of the sky, or break when taxiing on the ground. They have incidents when landing and taking off – just when they become an interface vehicle. Space craft have their problems on re-entry when they reach the interface of the atmosphere.

Everything in design is interconnected. It's what we call the design spiral.

At it's simplest - suppose we want a boat to go faster. We put in a bigger engine. But that's heavier, so the hull has to be bigger, so it has more drag, so goes slower, so we have to put in an even bigger engine. That is spiralling up and is the easy option.

An alternative is to make the boat lighter. Then we can use a smaller engine, so the loads reduce, so we can have thinner scantlings, so we can have a yet smaller engine. That is spiralling down and is usually the route I prefer

Although it is easy to find a solution to a problem, it's much harder to come up with a simple one. Harder still to design something that can actually be built. Hardest of all is to design something that can be built in wood

It's best to design the whole boat in your head first, only later do you draw it. Even then you can expect several false starts.

The smaller the boat the more you have to compromise your ideas. That's mainly because people don't get shorter when they go on a smaller boat. So, for example, freeboard is always proportionately higher. Furthermore the essentials for living on board weigh pretty much the same for a small boat as a big one.

Clearly when sailing at sea you always need a minimum freeboard for safety and comfort on board. The bottom line is that the bigger the boat the better it looks. Not only that but bigger boats perform relatively better. So it is really hard to make a good looking, fast, small boat. Science and the human anatomy are against you.

Usually professionals draw the lines plan last. For you cannot finalise that until you know, for example, how big the engines must be to go at the required speed. And thus how much space they take up and where the centre of gravity will be.

A good hull shape isn't just a matter of having the right centre of gravity and displacement. It also has to allow the boat to move efficiently through the water. After all, and as an extreme example, a boat might float level and on its marks at rest, but may do 60 knots going forwards and 6 knots backwards. So knowing which end of a boat is which is important!

Before developing my Skoota range of power catamarans I studied the available data on pontoon boats.

skoota 36 catamaran

I found that a typical 20ft pontoon boat weighs about 1500lbs, so is similar to a Skoota 20, yet it needs a 50hp outboard to motor at 16 knots. Whereas the Skoota goes that speed with a 25hp. Or put it another way, the Skoota hull has nearly half the resistance of a similar sized pontoon boat. Proving that proper hull design DOES matter.

skoota 36 catamaran

And in some ways having an efficient hull is more important on a powerboat than even a racing sailboat. That is obviously because a powerboat hull with higher resistance uses more fuel, whereas the wind is free.

So who thinks fuel is expensive here? Well for comparison in the UK gas costs USD 9 a gal, in Canada it is USD 6.4 a gal. Even in the Philippines it is over USD4 a gal and that is in a country where the average wage is under USD300 a month. Right now gas is 3.20 a gal in Seattle. So you shouldn't be surprised that boats have smaller engines in other countries, and that huge sectors of the US boating market, like sports fishermen for example, just don't exist anywhere else and will die out here once US fuel prices match the rest of the world.

And while on the subject of fuel. To get to Alaska you only need a maximum range of 250 miles. Less than you need in the lower Mississippi if you are doing a Great Loop cruise. Mind you in many places round here you can buy fuel, but there's no water. Saturna and Galiano are two Gulf islands with no dockside water.

OK, back on topic:

Monohull sailboats are very different to powerboats. They roll in both wind and waves, they heel over, have a deep draft, a small cockpit and limited accommodation, and generally have no view out when down below. So it is a big change to go from a sailing monohull to any powerboat, whereas a sailing catamaran is similar to a power boat in many ways. Both offer level sailing, good accommodation with all round visibility and no deep keel. So maybe that's why it has been easier for us to make a transition from a sailing catamaran to a powerboat.

So given that we wanted a powerboat what sort should it be? There are 4 basic choices: displacement, planing, semi displacement and multihull - and I think you know which I'm going to suggest.

But before I do I'll talk about the options.

Displacement boats are slow and heavy, but as a result generally have a seakindly motion. They are limited to their “hull speed” which roughly is proportional to 1.34 times the square root of the WL length. So it's difficult to go over 8 knots if the boat is under 40ft.

skoota 36 catamaran

Thus most displacement powerboats cruise around 7knots, just like a motoring sailboat does. They are usually sold as rugged “go anywhere” vessels, and, because of their bulky hull shape, fuel consumption can be high if motored fast. However many people say they look like a proper yacht and many displacement boats are sold purely on that classic styling look

skoota 36 catamaran

Planing hulls are typically at least twice the speed of a displacement hull of the same length, slower than that and they aren't fully planing.

skoota 36 catamaran

They are very inefficient at slow speeds due to the transom drag. And are also less seaworthy, because in bad weather and big waves

skoota 36 catamaran

when they are forced to slow down, they trim down by the bow and so the risk of nosediving is considerable. At best they are then wet and uncomfortable. Even in flat water the hull slams when planing, so it is uncomfortable and noisy on board underway. The engines have to be large and they use a lot of fuel, so much of the interior is taken up by machinery and tanks. That reduces living space and also means engine noise, smell and vibration increase.

A semi displacement boat

skoota 36 catamaran

might be a good compromise, or the worst of both worlds. In part it depends on the cruising speed you chose. One definite advantage is that one can go faster when needed - to outrun bad weather, catch a tidal gate or even cut across the bow of a ship, which a displacement hull can never do. However it is never as efficient as the other types, so fuel consumption is higher than for a displacement boat. It will have more room than a planing boat as the bow section will be fuller and probably has a smaller engine space. Another drawback of the semi-displacement is poor seakeeping in a following sea, while steering can also be tricky unless you can outrun the waves. But even so, it's way better than a planing boat that has slowed down.

There is an alternative to these boats - the powercatamaran. Now you may say "Oh no, I don't want one of those modern untested things". But then you probably don't know that possibly the second motor boat ever built was  a powercat. Launched in October 1788 in Scotland (the first motor boat was launched a couple of years earlier in France). See more here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Miller_of_Dalswinton

skoota 36 catamaran

Power catamarans offer many significant advantages over monohull power boats. In general they offer low wake and much improved fuel economy compared to other powerboats. They are comfortable under way with no slamming or broaching in waves and have excellent handling in a seaway, They use two small engines not one big one. That's clearly much safer and more manouverable. You can turn on the spot without using the rudders for example. You can run just on one engine when cruising at low speed, or run one for battery charging, which is better for the engine life. They do not roll when fishing or at anchor and are easy and safe to beach. If you don't roll at anchor and have a fuel efficient boat you visit marinas less often and can spend the money saved on more fuel so you can cruise further.

skoota 36 catamaran

They can maintain high speeds in rough conditions, and have superb directional stability. They are safer, due to their high stability, fully buoyant hulls and self draining cockpit. They do not heel when cornering, nor trim excessively at speed, so you can always see what's ahead They have more deck and interior space for a given length, not just because of their wide beam, but also because they have an essentially rectangular living space. Thus they do not have to be as big as a monohull to give the same interior room, performance and safety. Furthermore, docking is easy on a catamaran as its sides are essentially parallel, while anchoring is also easier on it's big wide foredeck.

skoota 36 catamaran

And that's one reason why I don't think a power trimaran is a good idea is, because it is so hard to dock or even to board when alongside.

However most power catamarans available today are planing boats, with all the disadvantages that the type implies.

skoota 36 catamaran

Furthermore they tend to have a narrow, 8ft 6in, maybe up to 10ft beam, so they can be trailed, so that many of the advantages of the catamaran form are wasted. In part the choice of design boils down to how fast do you really want to go and why? You aren't on a cruise ship with deadlines, nor towing waterskiers. It seems that few boats cruise at more than 12 knots, however fast they potentially are – I know that, because we overtake most cruisers when going at our normal 11 knot cruising speed. So few cruisers really benefit from having a planing boat.

Regardless of hull type, one of the big differences between a sailboat and a powerboat is you helm a sailboat and drive a powerboat. You don't need to look at sails and don't need to feel for weatherhelm. So you can steer from anywhere, inside or on the coachroof, or both. However twin steering is not only more complicated, but also takes up more room, both inside and out. For remember you have to include a passageway to the helm seat. So basically on a small boat it's not worth it – as I said, everything is a compromise

A flybridge has more motion when at sea and needs protection so you end up with a third story, with lots of added weight and windage in the wrong place. When it's not very clear outside, interior reflections will interfere with visibility from an enclosed wheelhouse. As will steam from cooking. Maybe it's because I'm a sailor, but I prefer the conventional behind the aft bulkhead at the front of the cockpit helm position. That position also means I can see the sterns, which is often really important when docking

Now I want to talk briefly about stability There are three basic ways to lose stability, the first is by wind, which obviously mainly affects sailing boats, but also some high freeboard powerboats in very high winds. The second is by being rolled over in a big wave and the third is after being swamped, usually because your cockpit is too big and when full of water the stern goes underwater and the boat sinks.

The only sort of boat that can self-right from a knockdown is the monohull keelboat, but even then it may still need rescuing, in part because hatches may be open and the boat floods. I'll show you a video tomorrow of what I mean

All other boats throughout history can capsize. A typical fishing boat or even warship will capsize at about 40deg of heel, so a trawler yacht will obviously be much the same. We’ve been on a US warship in bad weather and were told - “we’re staying hove to, it’s too dangerous to continue into it, and yes even we stop fighting in a storm - but then so does the other side“. A high freeboard boat with a flybridge probably capsizes at an even lower angle.

Although a low c of g is very important for stability in a sailing monohull it is less so on other boats as it only has a major effect at high heel angles. A high cofg still increases pitching and rolling though

If you don't have a deep ballasted keel then you have to rely on what we call “form stability”, which is the shape of the boat. At its simplest a boat is considered stable in waves until the wave height exceeds the beam of the boat, so the wider the boat the safer it is. And if you heave to and stop you are generally safer than if you keep moving. Unfortunately, wave resistance is proportional to the cube of the wl beam, so narrow hulls are faster, but less stable

One of the worlds leading yacht research centres is Southampton University's Wolfson unit. Some years ago they performed model tests of various boat in waves. I've seen the videos they made, which were more realistic than even the Perfect Storm movie. However they are not public domain.

In the Wolfson tests they found it very easy to capsize a monohull powerboat, but try as hard as they could they never capsized the power catamaran.

Ok that's the basic choices, now we need to refine it

As I've just said, design is a spiral, but one has to start somewhere. Lets start with size.

So how big a boat should the ideal PNW cruiser be? I always say get the smallest boat you need, not the biggest you want. Smaller boats are more fun, and easier to handle. Obviously they are also cheaper to buy and maintain. For remember running costs are usually about 10% of the purchase price. I never go for styling for the sake of it, I chose the boat that best meets my needs regardless of looks or price. And please, don't think “we'd better buy a big boat, just in case the grandchildren want to come” Instead, get one you can handle easily with just your normal crew. You'll use it more and it won't be such a stressful experience.

Famous local designer Bill Garden has said that the ideal sized PNW coastal cruiser for a couple with occasional guests is 32 feet. Which is a good match for the “drinks for 6, meal for 4, sleeps 2” concept.

You live in a house, not a hotel, so when cruising for longer periods you’ll want a comfortable home, not a hotel room. That’s why buying a boat designed for chartering doesn't make much sense. Most cruisers don’t want lots of bunks and ensuite showers. Instead, one good double bunk is enough, although maybe a spare for friends or family is useful. More important are a big galley and a good heads compartment.

skoota 36 catamaran

Absolutely essential is a comfortable saloon with an all round view. After all, when on land we don’t choose to live in a basement, the expensive apartments are always the penthouse suites. So cruisers, who spend much of their time at anchor, should be able to enjoy the view from inside, not just from the cockpit. Of course being able to stay inside, yet still be on watch, makes passage-making safer and that much more enjoyable. Especially round here with all the floating logs and weed to avoid.

My first power catamaran was the Skoota 20 which we built in Canada and used for a couple of seasons.

skoota 36 catamaran

Our longest trip was to the Princess Louisa inlet, but since the cabin was only 5ft long it wasn't that comfortable for long cruises, for it was really built as a test bed for my ideas.

skoota 36 catamaran

It worked well, so I later drew 24, 28 and 36ft versions. The two small boats fold and are trailable, the Skoota 28 is transportable, as it bolts together, and is the one I have on show here.

skoota 36 catamaran

The Skoota 36 is a live aboard cruiser, there's a wooden one being built in Vancouver for an experienced cruising couple. They just came back from a Pacific cruise, and, like us, have chosen a powercat over a sailing boat as their ideal PNW cruiser

My Skootas use semi displacement, non-planing, asymmetric hulls.

skoota 36 catamaran

The hulls are finer than those used on a sailing boat, because power boats always have power available to get over the hump speed, so wetted surface friction drag is less of an issue, as that's really only relevant to slower speeds, well below the normal cruising speed for a powerboat

Tank testing I've done has shown that there is significant extra drag caused by wave interactions between the hulls, it's up to 20% at certain speeds, if the hulls are close together. That's one very good reason why I don't like the narrow powercats you see around. My Skoota 20 and 24 are 12ft wide but fold for trailering.

skoota 36 catamaran

The Skoota 28 has widely spaced hulls, yet will still fit in a standard 14ft slip. Put simply, the hull asymmetry helps fool the water into thinking the hull spacing is wider than it really is.

In the last 10 years we have owned sailing catamarans from 25 – 38ft so we have a good idea of the size of boat that suits us best. Basically we know that 38ft is too big for us - the 38fter we sailed had 800sqft of living space. Bigger than our PT condo. Lots of boat to maintain and clean, even when at anchor, never mind the extra effort involved in sailing it

We had thought about building my Skoota 36ft powercat design, but after looking at similar sized monohull powerboats we realised that even that would be bigger than we needed, and certainly the running costs would be be higher. It might be different though, if we were living on board full time.

So we decided to have a Skoota 28 professionally built in wood. And that's something you should consider doing as well. Buying a one-off wood boat direct from the builder can actually work out cheaper than buying a production grp boat as you don't pay for the mould costs, nor for sales commissions.

skoota 36 catamaran

But the big plus is you get the boat you want, not what the boatyard wants you to have. We were very lucky with our builder, Josh Turner. A bit of a gamble using an unknown boatbuilder, but we were very pleased with his quality and speed of work.

skoota 36 catamaran

I don't like maintaining engines so I prefer outboards. They are lightweight, reliable, self contained and keep the engine noise and smell out of the accommodation. The new fuel injected ones are as efficient as diesels and you can take them to a mechanic for service or repair, not the other way round. You need fewer seacocks and hull fittings, so there is less chance of leaks. In fact on our boat we have no skin fittings at all, for not only do we have outboards but we also have a composting toilet made by C-head, and an excellent buy. We don't even have any bilges, so have no need for a bilgepump. Our insurers think we have a safe boat as they know the most common claims are for engine failure and hull leaks, or even sinking.

I won't tell you any more about the layout of the boat as you can go see it, and in fact you might already have seen it online in Wooden Boat magazine as it was last weeks “Boat of the Week”. But I will show you this video

or here if the embedded video does not play

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIvM01seyLA

It was taken shortly after launching. Since then we have adjusted the outboards so the boat trims more level. And we've fitted the cockpit seats and bimini and raised the helm seat on a pedestal. Although the top speed is around 16 knots with our twin 20 hp outboards, we usually cruise between 10 and 12

And you might find our fuel consumption figures interesting. A couple of weeks ago we took Skoota to the Vancouver wooden boat show. It was a 38 mile motor. We did it in 3 ¾ hours and used less than 5 gals of gas. That 7 mpg is typical of our cruising this year

We have yet to connect our main fuel tanks so are still using the 3 gal tanks than came with the engine. So I am not giving figures based on saying the tank was half full, now its ¼ full. Rather on how much is left after refilling the 3 gal tanks with a 5 gal one, so it's an accurate figure

Well that's it really. If any of you want a trial trip in our Skoota, well we will be living on board and cruising round here until mid October when we fly to Europe, so any time before then. The Skoota will be left in a local marina for the winter ready for our next trip north

  • The magazine

Current issue

  • All the issues
  • My magazines
  • Technical specifications
  • Multihull of the Year
  • Classified Ads
  • Destinations
  • Online store
  • All the magazines
  • Subscriptions
  • Accessories

Multihull of the year

A dismantlable powercat can be transported on a simple flatbed trailer... as long as it is of reasonable length and light in weight. Naval architect Richard Woods was able to test the validity of the concept with his own Skoota 28.

Create a notification for Multipower

We will keep you posted on new articles on this subject.

Avatar de Emmanuel van Deth

Published 05/02/2021

By Emmanuel van Deth

Published: mar. / apr. 2021

Multihulls World #176

Choose the option that suits you best!

Multihulls World #176

Issue #: 176

Published: March / April 2021

  • Price per issue - digital : 6.50€ Digital magazine
  • Price per issue - print : 8.50€ Print magazine
  • Access to Multihulls World digital archives Digital archives

Contact :  [email protected]

www.sailingcatamarans.com

Most-read articles in the same category

Dragonfly Days 2024

Dragonfly Days 2024

Bourgogne Catamaran

Bourgogne Catamaran

Rapido Trimarans

Rapido Trimarans

A la carte charter

A la carte charter

Nice Boating Tomorrow

Nice Boating Tomorrow

MiniCat 520

MiniCat 520

What readers think.

Post a comment

No comments to show.

MW #197 - Oct / Nov 2024

skoota 36 catamaran

T-2000 Voyager

70 Sunreef Power

70 Sunreef Power

Makai M37

Aventura 54 MY

Subscribe now.

The latest news from €3 / month

skoota 36 catamaran

Video of the month

Our latest YouTube hit!

skoota 36 catamaran

The Multihull of the Year

The 2024 results

skoota 36 catamaran

Classified ads

image description

PRIVILEGE 435 refited 2023

image description

Catamaran ORC 42 n°20

Vous avez ajouté " " à vos favoris., vous avez supprimé " " de vos favoris., in order to add this article to your favorites, please sign in..

skoota 36 catamaran

COMMENTS

  1. Sailing Catamarans

    The Skoota 36 is a very much larger boat than the 28, a few extra feet in length make a huge difference to the volume of a boat, and unfortunately, to the build time. More details of this design will be uploaded as it is developed. Several sets of plans have already been sold, one to a live aboard couple in Canada, shown above, while this one ...

  2. SKOOTA 28/36 Power cat

    Thank you for your interest in my Skoota designs. As Groper says, and as I write on my website, the Skoota 28 and 36 are new designs. Only one Skoota 28 is in the water (mine, in BC, Canada). One other is building (in Europe) and two Skoota 36's (one in BC, one in the UK). However about 40 of my smaller Skoota 20 and 24's are building or launched.

  3. PDF Skoota 36 comfortable live aboard cruiser or day charter

    The Skoota 36 is a very much larger boat than the 28, a few extra feet in length make a huge difference to the volume of a boat, and unfortunately, to the build time . More details of this design will be uploaded as it is developed. Several sets of plans have already been sold, one to a

  4. Skoota 32 live aboard cruiser

    Skoota 32 Power catamaran - an introduction. NOTE: The first Skoota 32 production version was launched August 13th 2018. Colours inside and out are owners choice! ... As on the Skoota 36 the hulls are symmetric to increase loading capacity. I have drawn a high (450mm, 18in, minimum) bridgedeck clearance both forward and aft for speed and ...

  5. Design

    The catamaran is a Skoota 36 designed by Richard Woods. It is a cruising motor catamaran powered by outboard engines. Construction is of timber and plywood sheathed in epoxy fibreglass. Richard Woods supplies a set of plans in PDF format. The plans are clear if you are used to reading drawings but there are no instructions or build sequences so ...

  6. Constructing a 40ft catamaran with WEST SYSTEM epoxy

    I chose to build a catamaran because I wanted the space and stability; preferring a power cat, I searched online for some designs and went for the Skoota 36 (Woods Designs). This is a relatively simple timber and plywood design sheathed in fibreglass, although I have slightly modified the design to increase the length to 40ft so that I could ...

  7. 24' skoota

    Quite a number of Skoota 20's and 24's are now building. The first Skoota 28 starts next week, and the first Skoota 36 on March 1st. So I am afraid I have been too busy drawing to update my website Having said that, you will see a photo of four adults sitting comfortably in the Skoota 20 saloon on my Latest News page. Scroll down to the July ...

  8. Skoota 32 Power catamaran

    Richard Woods Designs. ·. January 22, 2016 ·. Skoota 32 Power catamaran - an introduction. In the last 3 years we have cruised over 4000 miles in our own Skoota 28. From north of Vancouver Island to the Bahamas it has proven to be a great liveaboard cruising boat for a couple. I write this on board at anchor during a gale in the Bahamas ...

  9. 2023 Power Buyer's Guide

    2023 Power Buyer's Guide - 30 to 40 feet

  10. Skoota 28 transportable minimum live aboard cruiser

    As with my other powercat designs the Skoota 28 is designed as an economic cruiser with a cruising speed of 10-12 knots. Our Skoota is fitted with twin 20hp outboards yet still does over 16 knots flat out. Twin 60hp are the maximum recommended for speeds in the mid 20's. Apart from being comfortable, fast and economic underway, the Skoota is ...

  11. Woods Skoota 32DM

    by fallguy1000 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 2:54 pm. I have started the Richard Wood's designed Skoota 32DM. The build is getting done with 12mm corecell and Silvertip System 3 epoxy from bateau.com using developable panels built with vacuum and a full female frame. Richard Wood's designed the boat when I told him it was going to cost me 55k to move a ...

  12. Skoota Cat 36 Miami to Bimini

    About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features NFL Sunday Ticket Press Copyright ...

  13. Skoota 20 powercat to 10 knots from standing start.wmv

    20ft Skoota power catamaran by Woods Designs 0-10 knots in 6 seconds using a 25hp outboardbuild your own in plywood see Woods Designs www.sailingcatamarans.c...

  14. Skoota 28

    The Skoota 28 is a 28 ft plywood demountable coastal cruising power catamaran for a couple. Ideal for the European canals, the PNW or the Great Loop. It will demount for transport on a flat bed lorry/truck or could even be towed by a large car but should not be considered "trailable". When disassembled it does not need a "wide load permit ...

  15. Introduction to the Skoota Power Catamarans

    Before developing my Skoota range of power catamarans I studied the available data on pontoon boats. I found that a typical 20ft pontoon boat weighs about 1500lbs, so is similar to a Skoota 20, yet it needs a 50hp outboard to motor at 16 knots. ... The Skoota 36 is a live aboard cruiser, there's a wooden one being built in Vancouver for an ...

  16. Aegean 30

    Naval architect Richard Woods was able to test the validity of the concept with his own Skoota 28. Aegean 30. Aegean 30. Aegean 30. 1 ... The objective was to increase the beam - now close to that of a sailing catamaran - and the headroom while offering two additional berths in the hulls. ... Draft: 14 in (0.36 m) Headroom in nacelle: 6ft 2in ...

  17. PDF Skoota 32 live aboard cruiser

    Skoota 32 Power catamaran - an introduction NOTE: The first Skoota 32 production version has now been sold. Building will start in Cornwall, UK in March 2016. ... As on the Skoota 36 the hulls are symmetric to increase loading capacity. I have drawn a high (450mm, 18in, minimum) bridgedeck clearance both forward and aft for speed and comfort in ...

  18. Endeavour Catamaran 36 boats for sale

    2020 Leopard 40. $395,000. $3,001/mo*. Road Town, VG VG1110 | Moorings Yacht Brokerage. <. 1. >. Find 28 Endeavour Catamaran 36 boats for sale near you, including boat prices, photos, and more. Locate Endeavour Catamaran boat dealers and find your boat at Boat Trader!

  19. PDF Skoota Power Catamarans

    For the Skoota 24 the computer predicts a 17 knot maximum speed using a central 40hp outboard. Manouverability and general seaworthiness will be similar to the Skoota 20 Although the prototype Skoota 20 has a Yamaha 25 4 stroke outboard, an Evinrude e-tec long shaft engine (25hp on the Skoota 20, 40hp on the Skoota 24) is recommended, in part as it

  20. Skoota 36 comfortable live aboard cruiser or day charter

    Sailing Catamarans - Skoota 36 comfortable live aboard cruiser or day charter. Sailing Southern Star. Boat Construction. Boat Interior Design. Shipping Container Design. Catamaran Yacht. Boat Restoration. Sailboat Design. Boat Build. Fibreglassing of the topsides continues. John Date. Sailing Dinghy. Make A Boat. Building Images.

  21. PDF Skoota 24 By Woods Designs www.sailingcatamarans

    Conclusion. The Skoota 24 offers: stability, low wake, the ability to maintain high speeds in rough conditions, superb directional stability, a self-draining cockpit, fully buoyant hulls for safety, fuel-efficiency, lots of interior space, low speed maneuverability and the security of twin engines. A clear winner by anyone's standards.