Yachting

(Wang) #1
82 http://www.yachtingmonthly.com MAY 2016

USED BOAT TEST The UKÕs most comprehensive yacht tests


This innovative


wishbone Cat Ketch


became popular in


the 1980s for her speed, agility


and ease of handling. Duncan


Kent climbs aboard to see


what makes her so different


The UKÕs most comprehensive yacht testsThe UKÕs most comprehensive yacht tests


This innovative


Freedom 35

E


very yacht needs a mast, but not
every mast needs standing rigging
to hold it up. It would be easy to
dismiss a rig that one feels looks
‘wrong’ as actually being wrong,
but when you’ve sailed a Freedom rig you’ll
realise how they got their name. Freedom
Yachts of Rhode Island, USA, produced
the Freedom range of cruising yachts with
free-standing rigs from 1976 to 1985.
Their stayless rig was
originally developed in
1976 by a free-thinking
American, Garry Hoyt,
and his fi rst yacht to
sport this was the fast,
but easy to handle
Freedom 40. The class
won races worldwide and
became a regular sight
at many regattas.
Not to be confused with
the later David Pedrick-
designed Freedom 35,
which came into being
towards the early 1990s,
the American Freedom
33 Cat Ketch became
the Freedom 35 when
production started in the UK, thanks to the
addition of a two-foot long bowsprit.

Performance
The wind during our test day averaged
10-12 knots true, with occasional 15-knot
gusts. The Freedom rig feels like you have
two self-tacking mainsails, so short-
tacking back up the Beaulieu River at the
end of the day was effortless and great fun.
Better still, having two equally sized sails
meant we were able to goose-wing dead
downwind on the way out with much more
control and balance than we’d have had
with a Bermudian rig, all good so far.
With the centre of effort kept low, the
wishbone booms also allow the curve of

force 6 and in the main in force 7. Reefi ng
takes very little time and effort. Once the
outhaul and halyard are released, the sails
simply drop down into the wishbones.

At the helm
Under way, all the lines fall easily to hand,
making her an ideal boat for single-
handing. The sail controls differ slightly
from the usual sloop rig, so at fi rst it can be
a little baffl ing which line does what, but it
soon becomes obvious.
Each wishbone boom has a 3:1 sheet
tackle, routed through a track-mounted
traveller and led back through a cam cleat
to the cockpit. The top of each mast has
a swivel-mounted halyard block and the
halyards are also led aft, along with the
outhauls, reefi ng lines, boom hauls and
a centreboard control line. Forward of
the wheel is a large raised console (an
extension of the coachroof in fact) where all

Freedom 35 – Performance on test
Point
of sail

Apparent
wind
angle

Apparent
wind
speed

Speed
through
the water
Close-
hauled

35° 12-15 knots 4.9-5.2 knots

Fetch 60° 12-15 knots 5.1-5.6 knots
Beam
reach

90° 12-15 knots 5.4-6.4 knots

Broad
reach

120° 8-12 knots 4.4-6.4 knots

Run 180° 8 knots 4.6 knots

the sail to continue all the way to the foot,
similar to those of a windsurfer.
Thanks to her fl exible spars, which
effectively ‘spill’ the strong gusts, the
Freedom is apparently able to withstand
winds up to a force 6 before needing a
reef. In practice, however, we found the
downside of leaving full sail up too long
was her tendency to aquire weather helm,
which was considerable once we had 16
knots or so blowing across the decks and
became quite a handful when we hoisted
the mizzen staysail. Derrick, who owns our
test boat, Green Flash, says he usually puts
the fi rst reef in the mizzen at the top end
of force 4, then one in the main in force


  1. The second reef is tied in the mizzen in


RIGHT: After sailing
a Freedom rig you
may think ‘why
aren’t all yachts
made like this?’

Controls for the cat rig are on the console in front of the helm
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