Wharram Hinemoa Catamaran (sprit rigged sloop)

Wharram Hinemoa Catamaran (sprit rigged sloop)

Description

The Wharram Hinemoa is a classic 24 ft (7.3 m) Polynesian-style cruising catamaran designed by James Wharram in 1969 and built by amateurs worldwide in plywood/epoxy from his famous plans. With a beam of 10 ft 6 in, low bridge deck clearance, and two slim V-section hulls carrying 5 ft 6 in draft (with low-aspect fixed mini-keels), the Hinemoa is lightweight (around 1,800–2,200 lbs. complete) and easily beachable or trailerable. It carries a simple, low-stress sprit-rigged sloop on unstayed alloy masts: a large leg-o’-mutton mainsail laced to a diagonal sprit boom and a small jib, giving very easy handling and respectable light-air performance (SA/D ~20–22). Accommodation is basic but ingenious: a small central plywood pod amidships plus a full-length tent or flexible shelter stretched between the beams and masts, creating a layout that sleeps 4 comfortably on the bridge deck floor. Built by hundreds of owners from the 1970s through today (plans still in print), the Hinemoa remains one of the most successful and beloved of Wharram’s smaller “coastal trekker” designs – rugged, inexpensive, seaworthy for its size, and perfect for adventurous couples or young families exploring shallow bays, rivers, and protected coastal waters.

Construction Details

Designer James Wharram Designs
Length 23.000 ft
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The standard boat dimensions

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

Sails

Wharram Hinemoa Catamaran (sprit rigged sloop) - JIBSAIL

Luff 15.58 ft - (4749 mm)
Foot 9.42 ft - (2871 mm)
Leech 12.5 ft - (3810 mm)
Length Perpendicular 7.56 ft - (2304 mm)
Area * 58.87 ft²
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Wharram Hinemoa Catamaran (sprit rigged sloop) - SPRIT

Luff 12.25 ft - (3734 mm)
Foot 9.42 ft - (2871 mm)
Leech 16.75 ft - (5105 mm)
Tack Angle 86 °
Diag (clew/throat) * 14.92 ft - (4548 mm)
Head 7.58 ft - (2310 mm)
Area * 114.11 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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