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The
‘Magnum V’ was one of a series of highly successful
designs to the International Moth class rules by Mervyn
Cooke and John Claridge. The ‘V’ was the first
of these skiffs to carry weight well (and hence suitable
for me!) and had a good all-round performance, though
tacking was very slow and cumbersome compared to the
scow. Unable to spend the time or energy developing
the mark 4 scow (see the design section for its predecessor)
- and certainly not having the time to build the rather
time consuming space-frame necessary for stiffness in
such a thin-bodied design - and with design development
apace ( as it so often is in the class) the simplicity
and speed of such a design appealed, particularly as
I had discovered the delight of open-meeting racing
and wanted to be competitive in the usual moderate wind
conditions on open water. As plans were unavailable,
I bought a bare shell from Claridge, then framed and
decked it myself. This boat proved to be the most
demanding, exhilarating, heart-stopping racing boat
that I have ever sailed, one that I continued to race
even when it was no longer competitive simply because
of its looks and its wonderful acceleration and the
sheer delight in mastering such a highly-strung
beast. Not for the faint of heart, though! |
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For the full
11 years that I owned this boat, it proved to be not
only water-tight, but air-tight too: on a summer’s day,
if you pulled one of the bungs, the air fair whistled
out; in winter, after 5 minutes in the water, the foredeck
would suck down so much that it became hollow and the
framing stood out. I always pulled the bung and
reset it before setting out, but the deck would again
suck down after 15 minutes and remain that way until
the end of the race. |
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Yes,
I would go faster if I kept the boat flat! Note
that when sitting forward on the wing like this, the
helm was feather light whether or not the boat was heeled
or upright; when planing and sitting back, however,
unless the boat was absolutely flat, there would be
tremendous lee or weather helm depending on which way
the boat was heeling - letting the boat heel was not
an option! |
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Eleven years
later, the epoxy was no longer crystal clear, but the
deck looked much the same as here when this photo was
taken when the Magnum had had about 5 years of summer
and winter racing. |
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I gave up Moth
racing in 1993 - the knees would no longer take it!
Take a look at the next page to see how the boats had
developed by about the mid 90’s |
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