Chameleon

Chameleon

Description

The Chameleon is a compact, multipurpose nesting dinghy designed by Danny Greene of Offshore Designs Ltd. in Bermuda, primarily as a tender for larger cruising sailboats. Introduced in the early 1980s as an evolution of Greene's earlier Two Bits design (1979), it addresses the challenges of storing a functional dinghy on small sailboats by splitting into two halves that nest together for compact storage. Built using the stitch-and-glue plywood/epoxy technique, it's suitable for amateur builders and emphasizes versatility: rowing (with two positions for 1–3 people), sailing (sprit rig), and motoring (2–4 HP outboard).

Construction Details

Designer Dann y Greene
Length 10.000 ft
LOA 10.330 ft
Beam 4.167 ft
Displacement 100 lb
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The standard boat dimensions

i -
j -
p -
e -
p2 -
e2 -
i2 -
j2 -

Sails

Chameleon - SPRIT

Luff 8.67 ft - (2643 mm)
Foot 6.75 ft - (2057 mm)
Leech 9.58 ft - (2920 mm)
Tack Angle * 81.47 °
Diag (clew/throat) 10.167 ft - (3099 mm)
Head 4.67 ft - (1423 mm)
Area * 51.16 ft²
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Disclaimer. Boats are not all the same -- even when produced in the same factory of the same model. Sailrite does its best to publish accurate dimensions, but we often find it worthwhile to have our customers measure their boats carefully before we produce kits for them. You should take the same precautions, especially when the data is not from Sailrite. The information on this site is not guaranteed to be accurate. Sailrite offers this content as a service to our community, but takes no responsibility for the reliability of the data provided.

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