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In January 1995 Sail magazine named the F-27 as one of several boat designs that "had a significant and positive impact on sailing over the past 25 years". [1] The F-27 was inducted into the American Sailboat Hall of Fame on 29 January 2004. [1] In 2016, Sailing magazine's technical editor Bob Perry described the F-27 as "a great boat". [9]
Farrier had patented a hull folding system in 1975, and designed and built the company's first product, the Corsair F-27. Farrier stayed with the company until 1991 when he decided to pursue his own business interests. In 1994, John Walton sold Corsair Marine to Paul Koch who was the company's Australian Dealer at the time.
Corsair Cruze 970: 2012: Corsair Design Team: Corsair Marine [177] DC‐14 Phantom: 1964: MacLear & Harris: Duncan Sutphen Inc. [178] Diam 24: 2014: VPLP: Vianney Ancelin [179] Extreme 40: 2005: Yves Loday: Marstrom Composite [180] F-24 Sport Cruiser: 1991: Ian Farrier: Corsair Marine [181] F-27 Sport Cruiser: 1986: Ian Farrier: Corsair Marine ...
The F-24 Sport Cruiser is a recreational sailboat, built predominantly of vacuum bag molded fiberglass, Kevlar, carbon fiber over a foam core. It has a fractional sloop rig with a rotating mast. The hull and outriggers have nearly plumb stems and reverse transoms .
F-9AX A version of the F-9A with expanded interior space, with a 15% wider center hull for more room and a 16% higher load capacity. Trailering beam was also increased to 2.9 m (9.5 ft). [9] F-9R A high performance racing version of the F-9A with a rotating mast. [9] F-31 Sport Cruiser This model was designed by Ian Farrier and built by Corsair ...
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The Farrier F-24 is a recreational sailboat, built predominantly of fiberglass. It has a fractional sloop rig with a rotating mast. The hull and outriggers have nearly plumb stems and reverse transoms. The hull has a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller and a retractable daggerboard. It displaces 1,800 lb (816 kg) and carries no ballast ...
The design was built by Corsair Marine in the United States, starting in the early 1990s as the F-24. The name was changed to the Corsair 24 in 2000 when Farrier left the company and some minor changes made to the design. Production ran until 2003, with 200 Mark II boats completed, but it is now out of production. [1] [2] [7] [8]