Don wrote:
Can anyone give an approximate cost for fabricating a junk rig for the following boat:
http://yachtdesign.com.br/ingles/projetos/pa28/dim28.php
Single mast, guess the target sail area would be about 450 square feet following the 'sloop rig plus 10%' rule. Boat would be built in the UK.
Any other feedback - eg, suitability of the boat for junk rig - would be welcome.
Thanks in advance!
Don
Hello Don, You will no doubt get other replies from some of our knowledgeable members but my contribution is that it is very hard to even put a ball park figure on a junk conversion. It all depends on which country you are in and availability of materials for a suitable mast and whether you do the rig build yourself which probably most JRA people do, or whether you have it all done professionally. The problem to is that even once you have your sail plan, if you go to a regular sail maker they do not really know much about building junk sails, so you may end up with an expensive not properly built junk sail.
The best starting point is to design a junk rig based on the CE of the normal bermudan sail plan of the boat, and the CLR of the hull based on a hull drawing or profile drawing. There are some of our members who can help you with this, or you can do it yourself based on the information provided in Practical Junk Rig. Once you have a junk sail plan sorted out you can then begin costing the rig, but there is no such thing as an 'off the shelf' junk rig. But because you are in the UK if you look at the last page of the current JRA magazine you will find some advertisements for makers of junk rigs and sails in your part of the world, so they might be a good starting point.
Regarding suitability of the boat, they say that almost any boat can be converted to junk rig, but the big thing is placement of mast and what effect that might have on interior accommodation arrangements. If it is a new build it is much easier to work around this as a suitable mast step can be done as part of the build, but if it was a conversion to an existing boat there may well be a lot of modification needed to the cabin top, and the construction of a suitable mast step, all of which are going to add variables to the costing.
Good luck with the project.