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10-03-2004, 06:28 AM
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#61 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| D 20 ST
My latest designs in small crafts are made with the experience from the commuters we have built over the last two years. Here is a step forward in contemporary lines and simplistic solutions. The smallest, D 20 ST, has an open plan with seating for 5-6 people and sleeps 2-3. The sunhatch opens up the whole aft part in a second. The hull shape will allow high speeds with a soft ride and low fuel consumption. Producer is still an open question...
Last edited by AMG : 10-03-2004 at 06:50 AM.
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10-03-2004, 06:37 AM
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#62 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| D 30 SC
This will be a very versatile boat as you can transport 8 people with comfort, sleep 4 and with a small pantry use it as a holiday cruiser as well. Also this boat can open up above the drivers seat and aft there are two sliding glass doors. The toilet is fully enclosed with standing height and a skylight on top. Single or twin engines for speeds in excess of 50 knots.
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10-03-2004, 06:45 AM
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#63 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| D 40 CC
This 40-footer is basically with the same interior as the one I showed on the previous page. With two good double cabins, galley a half step down opposite the shared toilet room. The dinette is raised to give a good outlook underway and the forward sofa can be tilted back for dining.
Walkaround decks with two sliding side doors, and above the aft deck is an integrated fly steering position. The ultimate commuter or family cruiser for long weekend trips. Can´t wait to see her built...
Last edited by AMG : 03-16-2005 at 11:27 AM.
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10-04-2004, 02:55 PM
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#64 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| 26 Retro in wood
Wooden boats are now again in demand, both old, restored and new construction. In Scandinavia we have schools where to be a wooden boatbuilder. But there are very few new designs.
I have made a type of boat that looks like a boat from the fifties, but has a modern deep V hull and a daycruiser interior. With epoxi treatment she will be almost as easy to maintain as a GRP-boat, and nothing comes near the feeling of a shining mahogany hull.
This boat is only 26 feet, another I have made is 41 feet and I also have a 60-footer halfway finished in my computer...
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10-04-2004, 08:27 PM
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#65 | | Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: n/a
Posts: 30
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I like the 40 footer...so that has the same type of interior as in the 25 footer or the 40 footer on the previous page? |
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10-05-2004, 02:45 AM
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#66 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
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Yachtlover,
I guess it would be much less confusing to you if you are printing out the pages!
/Lars
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10-05-2004, 06:35 PM
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#67 | | Publisher/Administrator
Join Date: Dec 2002 Location: South Florida
Posts: 10,318
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Over 1000 views in just over a month! Congratulations Lars!!
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10-05-2004, 07:11 PM
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#68 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| Thanks to YachtForums!
Carl,
It has been a pleasure to be able to post so many yachts and get so much feedback, several new contacts offline as well. I hope my fellow designers will do the same since I guess there must be a lot of unpublished designs out there
As an interlude, I´ll submit my magic outlook now at midnight. Almost like a ship...
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10-06-2004, 12:22 PM
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#69 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| B L I N G
It is not everyday you are asked to make a design proposal on a 100 m yacht. But we were a few designers who got the question some years back and it was to make a conversion of a building in progress, where the buyer wanted something really modern and outstanding. But the timeframe was very short so I gave a walk-over and headed for the Fort Lauderdale show...
When I got back home I still thought I should give it a try and this is the result.
My entry was too late and the design concept perhaps too early?
But a forward thinking client might have it delivered just in time to set a new trend |
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10-07-2004, 11:45 AM
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#70 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| Mother is right...
I showed this thread to my mother a week ago and she said she couldn´t see any difference between all the yachts I have been drawing since almost 50 years...
So I had to dig deep in those old boxes she stored and what did I find, if not my old notebooks from school, flooded with yachts!
The biggest was 325 m, (1065 feet) and the one below had no dimensions but a price tag that wasn´t too unrealistic. The year is 1960.
What you see must be one of the first yachts with a helipad, and features like tenders on fore deck, fixed roof on the flybridge, oversized portholes...
To be made by a young schoolboy that never had seen the open sea, and never a yacht bigger than 40 feet it is hard to believe where it all came from?
I have to admit that mother is right, the yachts look almost the same today |
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10-08-2004, 11:41 AM
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#71 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| Anyone care for a Royal Yacht?
In the mid 90:s there was a big hype about replacing the Royal Yacht Britannia.
All designers wanted to participate with ideas to get this prestigious job, including me. However my ideas remained in my computer and you are the first to see it!
I only wish there were more state ships and less war ships built...
Last edited by AMG : 10-12-2004 at 04:36 AM.
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10-10-2004, 06:41 PM
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#72 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| D 66 CE
Here is a high speed 66 feet motoryacht, which should have a cruising speed of 50 knots with waterjets. A nice feature is the master stateroom where you have a direct access to the swim platform through the bathroom. You also get a sometimes desired separation from the guest cabins because of the central engine room. The engines might be a little too far forward for the length of the hull, so in reality I would like to add a few feet to the foreship since she has a quite narrow hull with a full 26 degrees deep V-shape.
Then nothing will stop her...
Last edited by AMG : 10-11-2004 at 03:09 AM.
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10-15-2004, 03:06 PM
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#73 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| M O D E A , 46m/150´1992
This design was conceived already in 1992. The main idea is to have all guest cabins on deck and the crew areas below. Here you see three guest cabins to port and two on starboard side behind the owners cabin. I have also made mirrored layouts with 2+2 or 3+3 cabins. The galley is forward of the engine room in the yachts gravity center, with a dumb waiter to all decks above. Laundry is in the passageway forward and the crew have a nice day area in connection with their cabins.
The decks are built with raised levels from midships to provide higher ceilings for the tender garages and in the saloons. The wheelhouse is very large with a dinette on the raised aft part. Behind is captains cabin opposite the library.
Engine room is divided so the gensets has their own compartments with a airconditioned control room in between. She is planned for waterjets and a cruising speed of 24 knots.
Last edited by AMG : 10-16-2004 at 03:53 PM.
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10-16-2004, 04:53 PM
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#74 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| 32 M/105´Modern Classic 1993
In one of the most popular sizes for semi-custom yachts, 105 feet and with a raised wheelhouse, I made this design which could have several profiles within the same concept. Here you see two of them.
Interior is with owners cabin on deck and four guest cabins below, as well as crew cabins for five. This was made as a yacht suitable for charter and with a cruising speed well above twenty knots.
Despite the design is eleven years old by now, she could still be built, with or without an updated profile. This is the beauty of semi-custom designs. |
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10-18-2004, 06:53 AM
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#75 | | YF Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,776
| Metamorphose...
Just for fun and to give you a hint on an "updated profile" of the above 32 m yacht.
Since I am not a fan of teardrop windows, I took this design a giant step in the other direction...
Last edited by AMG : 10-21-2004 at 12:15 PM.
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