
The J Class of racing
yachts
A yacht () is a sail- or marine propulsion, motor-propelled watercraft made for pleasure, cruising, or racing. There is no standard definition, though the term generally applies to vessels with a cabin intended for overnight use. To be termed a ...
(sometimes called "J-boats") were built to the specifications of
Nathanael Herreshoff's
Universal Rule. The J Class is considered the apex of the era when the Universal Rule determined eligibility in the
America's Cup.
With boats costing $10-20 million to build and yearly upkeep around $3 million, J Class racing has been described as the "most expensive hobby on Earth".
Universal Rule
The J Class is one of several classes deriving from the
Universal Rule for racing boats. The rule was established in 1903 and rates double-masted racers (classes A through H) and single-masted racers (classes I through S). From 1914 to 1937, the rule was used to determine eligibility for the Americas Cup. In the late 1920s, the trend was towards smaller boats and so agreement among American yacht clubs led to rule changes such that after 1937 the
International Rule would be used for
12 Metre class boats.
Universal Rule formula
The Universal Rule formula is:
Where:
**
is boat length (a number itself derived from a formula that includes
Length at the Waterline L.W.L in feet)
**
is sail area
**
is displacement
**
is rating
** Herreshoff initially proposed an index of .2 but ratifying committees of the various yacht clubs changed this to, at various times, .18 or .185. This is, essentially, a 'fudge factor' to allow some boats designed and built prior to the adoption of the Universal Rule to compete.
The numerator contains a yacht's speed-giving elements, length and sail area, while the retarding quantity of displacement is in the denominator. Also the result will be dimensionally correct; R will be a linear unit of length (such as feet or meters). J Class boats will have a rating from . This is not the overall length of the boat but a limiting factor for the variables in the equation. Designers are free to change any of the variables such as length or displacement but must reduce the other variables to compensate.
J Class examples
A table of well-known J Class yachts demonstrating that application of the Universal Rule could result in a rating
from . Length overall (LOA) of the yachts ranged from . Sail areas of the yachts ranged from .
Colors: Red: America's Cup challengers; Blue: defenders; Green: non-competitors
History and evolution of the J Class
Prior to the adoption of the Universal Rule, the
Seawanhaka Rule was used to govern the design of boats for inter club racing. As the Seawanhaka Rule used only two variables: Load Waterline Length (
) and Sail Area, racing boats at the time were becoming more and more extreme. Larger and larger sails atop shorter and wider boats leading either to unwieldy, and ultimately unsafe, boats or craft that simply were not competitive.
[ In order to account, in some ways, for the beam and the relationship of the length overall () to the load waterline length the universal rule was proposed, taking into account displacement and length, which itself was a result of a formula taking into account such things as "quarter beam length". As different boats were designed and built, the notion of classes was derived to maintain groupings of competitive class.
]
Following Sir Thomas Lipton's near success in the 1920 America's Cup, he challenged again for the last time at age 79, in 1929. The challenge drew all the novelties developed in the previous decade on small boats to be ported onto large boats, and pitted British and American yacht design in a technological race. Between 1930 and 1937, the improvements brought to the design of sailboats were numerous and significant:
*The high-aspect bermuda rig replaces the gaff rig on large sailboats
*Solid-rod lenticular rigging for shrouds and stays
*Luff and foot grooved spars with rail and slides replacing wooden hoops
*Multiplication of spreader sets: one set previously (1914), two sets (1930), three sets (1934), four sets (1937)
*Multiplication of the number of winch
A winch is a mechanical device that is used to pull in (wind up) or let out (wind out) or otherwise adjust the tension (physics), tension of a rope or wire rope (also called "cable" or "wire cable").
In its simplest form, it consists of a Bobb ...
es: 23 winches, ''Enterprise'' (1930)
*Electrical navigational instruments borrowed from aeronautics with repeaters for windvane and anemometer, ''Whirlwind'' (1930)
*"Park Avenue" boom (''Enterprise'', 1930) and "North Circular" boom (''Rainbow'', 1934) developed to trim mainsail foot
*Riveted aluminium mast (, Duralumin), ''Enterprise'' (1930)
* Genoa Jib (''Rainbow'', 1934) and quadrangular jib ('' Endeavour'', 1934)
*Development of nylon parachute (symmetric) spinnakers, including the World's largest at on ''Endeavour II'' (1936)
*Duralumin wing-mast, '' Ranger'' (1937)
All these improvements may not have been possible without the context of the America's Cup and the stability offered by the Universal Rule. The competition was a bit unfair because the British challengers had to be constructed in the country of the Challenging Yacht Club (a criterion still in use today), and had to sail on their own hull to the venue of the America's Cup (a criterion no longer in use today): the design for such an undertaking required the challenging boat to be more seaworthy than the American boats, whose design was purely for speed in closed waters regattas. The yachts that remain in existence are all British, and probably log more nautical miles today than they ever did. This would not have been possible if Charles Ernest Nicholson did not obtain unlimited budgets to achieve the quality of build for these yachts.
Yacht designer Clinton Hoadley Crane noted in his memoirs that "America's Cup racing has never led to good sportsmanship. The attitude of the New York Yacht Club ..has been more that of a man in the forward position at war who has been ordered to hold his position at all costs – ." In 1930, Thomas Lipton spent $1,000,000 for his '' Shamrock V'' challenge when America was facing a stock market crash, but the NYYC still built four cup defenders. The rivalry led both countries to put on a display of true technological innovations using the maximum load waterline length authorized by the rule for ''Endeavour II'' and '' Ranger'' in 1937.
Most J Class yachts were scrapped prior to or during World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
because steel and lead had become precious to the war effort. In the post-war era, J Class racing was deemed far too expensive, so no challenge for the America's Cup was placed until 1958 with the smaller third International Rule 12 Metre class.
Rigging problems
The original yachts carried masts, but they dismasted frequently. As a consequence, British yachtsman Sir Richard Fairey (Chairman of Fairey Aviation
The Fairey Aviation Company Limited was a British aircraft manufacturer of the first half of the 20th century based in Hayes, Hillingdon, Hayes in Middlesex and Heaton Chapel and RAF Ringway in Cheshire that designed important military aircraft ...
, and owner of '' Shamrock V'') suggested an America's Cup challenge in the smaller K-Class. The New York Yacht Club refused the drop in size.
The J Class rule was amended in 1937 to force rigs to weigh a minimum of 6,400 lb. The larger scantling would prevent the frequent dismastings that had been previously observed in the British Big Class season of 1935.
Revival
By the 1980s only three J Class yachts were still in existence: '' Shamrock V'', '' Endeavour'' and '' Velsheda'', all designed by Charles Ernest Nicholson. ''Velsheda'' never served for an America's Cup challenge.
A revival of the J Class was triggered by Elizabeth Meyer, who oversaw the refits of '' Endeavour'' and ''Shamrock V''. For several decades ''Velsheda'' lay derelict in the mud of the Hamble river – she was refitted in 1984, too, and then more completely in 1997.
In August 2001, as part of the celebration of the 150th Jubilee of America's Cup celebration, the three existing J Class racers were brought to the Isle of Wight for a round the island race.
The creation of the J Class Association in 2000 and the launch of a new replica of ''Ranger'' in 2004 accelerated the revival of the class. Several replicas and original designs were subsequently built and the association now organizes races for the J Class in Newport, Falmouth and Cowes.
The current J Class fleet comprises nine boats: ''Endeavour'', ''Hanuman'', ''Lionheart'', ''Rainbow'', ''Ranger'', ''Shamrock V'', ''Velsheda'', ''Topaz,'' and, launched in January 2017, ''Svea''.
On March 12, 2020, ''Svea'' and ''Topaz'' collided while maneuvering at the start line of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua. Both boats retired from racing with damage; two sailors were injured.
List of J Class yachts
Ten yachts were built to the J Class rule between 1930 and 1937, six in America and four in Great Britain.
Other boats raced in J Class regattas: the yachts ''Katoura'' (Starling Burgess, 1927), ''Resolute'' (Nathanael Herreshoff, 1914) and ''Vanitie'' (William Gardner, 1914) served as trial horses and most International Rule 23mR yachts were converted to the J Class, of which three remain in existence: ''Astra'', ''Cambria'' and ''Candida''.
Citations
Further reading
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Dykstra Naval Architects
- J Class refit, optimization and replica design (''Endeavour'', ''Velsheda'', ''Shamrock V'', ''Ranger'', ''Hanuman'', ''Rainbow'')
Sparkman & Stephens
- J Class design
Hoek Design
- J Class replica design (''Lionheart'', ''Topaz'', ''Svea'')
- 1989 article about Elizabeth Meyer's refit of ''Endeavour''
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youtube.com
- videos of J Class yachts
Classic Boat's History of the J Class
{{America's Cup
Development sailing classes