Claims
- 1. In a catamaran having a mast a main sail sheet and a pair of spaced hulls and means joining said hulls together, a head stay and shrouds for maintaining said mast vertical, improvement in the means joining said hulls together comprising,
- fore and aft cross beams, each cross beam having, the same wedge-shaped profile, the wedge-shaped profile having a thinnest edge and a thicker back, the thinnest edge of the wedge shape of the fore cross beam being essentially forwardly directed, the thinnest edge of the wedge of the aft cross beam being essentially aftwardly directed by rotating the aft cross beam by 180.degree. as compared to the fore cross beam,
- means forming correspondingly shaped fore and aft sockets in said hulls for receiving the respective ends of said cross beams,
- said mast being centrally stepped aftwardly on the thicker back of said forward cross beam so that said forward cross beam will receive a downward compression force bracing the fore cross beam in the fore sockets,
- said main sail sheet being connected to the aft cross beam so that said aft cross beam will receive upward tension forces, bracing additionally the cross beam in the aft sockets,
- whereby a balanced distribution of the forces engaging on the catamaran is achieved without load peaks.
- 2. A catamaran as defined in claim 1, wherein said mast includes lower and upper tubular mast sections, an inner pipe member entering said lower and upper mast sections,
- a pair of complementarily shaped nesting rings, the complementary shape of said nesting rings being adapted to permit one ring to nest within the other, one of said nesting rings being secured on the upper end of said lower mast section and the other of said nesting rings being on the lower end of the upper mast section, one of said nesting rings being secured to said inner pipe member and the upper one of said mast sections, and the other of said nesting rings being secured to said lower mast section, which nesting rings establish a precise alignment and linkage between said two mast sections guided by said inner pipe.
- 3. A catamaran as defined in claim 2, wherein said nesting rings are adapted to be put into positive mutual engagement and are always received in at least a forcefit at the corresponding end of their respective mast sections.
- 4. A catamaran as in claim 2 including additional rings disposed inside each said lower and upper mast sections for centering said inner pipe member.
- 5. A catamaran as defined in claim 1, including a hook, and means securing said hook to a forward portion of said mast, small ring means on the respective ends of said shrouds and said head stay, a larger ring engaged with all of said small rings and suspended in said hook.
- 6. A catamaran as defined in claim 1 having a rudder means, said rudder means including a rudder housing, a tiller handle secured to said rudder housing, a vertically shiftable rudder blade in said rudder housing, an elastic element under tension and connected between a point on said rudder housing and said rudder blade for automatically moving said rudder blade in a vertical direction in said rudder housing upon said rudder blade impacting a surface or object below the water surface.
- 7. A catamaran as defined in claim 6 wherein the point on said rudder housing is the tiller, said elastic element is an elongated rubber element, which is guided to said point by way of a curved surface on said rudder housing.
- 8. A catamaran as defined in claim 7 including a projection on the forward edge of said rudder blade, a cam mounted on the rudder housing engagable with said projection on said rudder blade said rudder blade being swivellable around a horizontal axis upon said rudder blade impacting a surface or object to disengage said projection from said cam.
- 9. A catamaran as defined in claim 8 including a guide element, said guide element being elastically prestressed in the direction of travel of the catamaran, said guide element being provided at a slight distance from the rear end of the rudder blade, which guide element is elastically prestressed with the help of a further elastic element to which it is attached, and which is guided around said rudder housing.
- 10. A catamaran as defined in claim 6 wherein said rudder blade comprises an extrusion molded aluminum member.
- 11. Catamaran as defined in claim 6 wherein the rudder blade and the longitudinal profile of the hulls are mutually synchronized such that the good maneuverability of the catamaran exists even in shallow waters as a result of the vertical adjustability of the rudder blade.
- 12. In a catamaran having at least a pair of spaced hulls the improvements wherein each of said hulls comprise a flat, one-piece fiber glass cover plate, two lateral fiber glass parts joined at their lower edges to form a V and having integral shoulders at their top sides which are interconnected by said flat one-piece cover at their top side, fore and aft wedge shaped beams joining said hulls, each said wedge shaped beam having a thin edge and a thick back with the thin edge of said fore beam being essentially forwardly directed and with the thin edge of said aft beam being essentially aftwardly directed, each hull having fore and aft transverse recesses, each recess being directed into the inside of the hull and adapted always to the profile of an associated wedge shape cross beam and is developed in one piece with said lateral parts for guidance and mounting of said fore and aft wedge shaped cross beams.
- 13. A catamaran as in claim 12 characterized in that two mutually aligned recess profiles of said two lateral parts directed into the inside of the hull body are interconnected by an inside profile which always encompasses the profiles of the lateral parts with one enlarged end of the inside profile.
- 14. A catamaran as defined in claim 12 including anti-slip strips on the top of the hull, whereby the two visible joints between the cover and said lateral parts are always aligned with the edges of said anti-slip strips.
- 15. A catamaran as defined in claim 12 wherein in the rear part of at least one of said hulls, a separate box is disposed, whereby the box and the rear, inside terminal section of the hull may be reached by way of a closable aperture in the cover.
- 16. A catamaran as defined in claim 12, including a trampolin, characterized in that said trampolin consists of two parts, each said trampolin part secured to a hull, respectively, and means firmly securing the forward and trailing edges of each trampolin part to said cross beams, respectively, lacing for mutually tightening said two trampolin parts in transverse direction to prestress said hulls against movement in a cross direction.
- 17. In a collapsible hollow mast for sailboats in which a continuous groove or slot for guiding the raising and lowering of the sail is provided along a side of said mast, said mast being constituted by at least one hollow upper mast section and one hollow lower mast section, improvement in the means for joining said upper mast section to said lower mast section without requiring critical tolerance of the individual parts of the mast and without reducing strength of the mast comprising,
- a first nesting ring secured within the upper end of said hollow lower mast section, said nesting ring having a curved surface,
- a second nesting ring secured within the lower end of said at least one hollow upper mast section, said second nesting ring having complementarily curved surfaces adapted to mate with said curved surface of said first nesting ring,
- the curved surface of one of said nesting rings being an inward arched concave area with the curved surface on the other of said nesting rings being complementary thereto, and ;
- a hollow inner tube telescoped within said at least one hollow upper mast section and sealingly secured therein to said second nestng ring, and having an end projecting beyond the lower end of said hollow upper mast section and through said first nesting ring.
- 18. The collapsible mast defined in claim 17 wherein each said nesting ring includes a flange member having flat mating surfaces outwardly of said complementarily curved surfaces.
- 19. In a catamaran having a pair of spaced hulls, fore and aft cross beam means spacing said hulls apart, a mast stepped on said fore crossbeam, a main sail sheet, and at least one rudder, the improvement in said mast as defined in claim 17.
- 20. The invention defined in claim 19 wherein said cross beam means are wedge shaped in cross section, each said hull having fore and aft transverse recesses, each recess receiving one end, respectively, of said wedge shaped cross beams, the forward cross beam being turned about its axis approximately 180.degree. relative to said aft cross beam whereby the compression stresses of the forward cross beam by the mast stepped thereon and the tension load of said aft cross beam by the main sail sheet fixed thereon is a balanced distribution of the loads occurring during sailing.
- 21. A rudder assembly for a sailboat comprising:
- a rudder housing,
- means for swivellably mounting said rudder housing on a sailboat,
- a rudder blade,
- means guiding said rudder blade in said rudder housing for vertical movement therein,
- a tiller handle secured to said rudder housing and
- means releasably positioning said rudder blade in said rudder housing at at least one selected vertical position, said means releasably positioning including,
- a first abutment on said rudder housing and a second abutment on said rudder blade for engaging said first abutment,
- a first biasing means connected between said blade and said rudder housing biasing said rudder blade to move in a vertical direction when said abutments are disengaged, and
- a second biasing means biasing said rudder blade in a forward direction,
- whereby when said rudder blade encounters an obstruction and is moved against the bias of said second biasing means to disengage said abutments said first biasing means moves said rudder blade in an upward vertical direction.
- 22. The rudder assembly defined in claim 21 wherein said rudder blade is extruded aluminum.
- 23. The rudder assembly defined in claim 21 wherein said guide means includes a guide element engaging the trailing edge of said rudder blade, said second biasing means prestressing said guide element in the direction of travel of said sailboat.
- 24. The rudder assembly defined in claim 23 wherein said first biasing means includes an elongated elastic element secured at one end to said rudder blade and at the opposite end to said tiller handle, said tiller handle constituting the connections to said rudder housing.
- 25. The rudder assembly defined in claim 24 including a roller on said rudder housing, said first biasing means being guided by said roller.
- 26. In a catamaran having at least a pair of spaced hulls joined by at least fore and aft cross beams, a sail on a mast stepped on said fore cross beam, and a main sail sheet, the improvement wherein said cross beams are generally wedge shaped and identical in cross section, each having a thin edge and a thick back, and said hulls having corresponding wedge shaped transverse recesses into which said fore and aft cross beams are received, the wedge shape of said fore cross beam being oriented about its axis to carry a compressive load from said mast such that its thin edge is forward and its thick back is aftward, said mast being stepped on said thick back, and said aft cross beam being oriented about its axis to carry tension forces of the main sail sheet from its thick back to thereby provide a substantially balanced distribution of forces engaging said catamaran.
- 27. The catamaran defined in claim 24 wherein each said hull is identical and constituted by an integrally molded pair of lateral side parts, which side parts meet at their lower ends to form a "V" shape for said hull, and curve inwardly at their upper ends to a continuous shoulder sections, a cover plate secured to said lateral side parts at said upper ends continuous shoulder sections, said wedge shaped transverse recesses including inwardly turned, aligned collars molded in said lateral side parts, each collar having a cross-sectional profile corresponding to that of said cross beams, and an internal tubular member having the same cross-sectional profile, and an enlargement on each end of said tubular members fitted onto said inwardly turned collars.
- 28. The catamaran as defined in claim 27 wherein the rear sections of said hulls are deep drawn.
Priority Claims (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2844766 |
Oct 1978 |
DEX |
|
2844767 |
Oct 1978 |
DEX |
|
2907518 |
Feb 1979 |
DEX |
|
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 083,717, filed Oct. 11, 1979 "Improvements In Sailboats Especially Catamarans" now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
270890 |
Feb 1965 |
AUX |
1050918 |
Dec 1966 |
GBX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
83717 |
Oct 1979 |
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