Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A 2017 used boat review in the Spinsheet, some 31 years after production ended, remarked, "following a design philosophy that dates back to the company’s founding in 1955, Pearson Yachts introduced the Pearson 303, in the 1983 model year as a no excuses, Plain Jane cruising boat. After almost 25 years, she remains just that."
The Pearson cousins left the company in the 1960s, and Bill Shaw became the chief designer. [1] One of Shaw's most notable designs is the flush decked Pearson 40, introduced in 1977. [3] Pearson filed for bankruptcy in 1991. At that time TPI Composites, formerly known as Tillotson-Pearson, purchased the rights to the Pearson Yachts brand name. [1]
The design was built by Pearson Yachts in the United States, from 1971 until 1981, with 1,185 boats completed by 1 January 1980, but it is now out of production. The design was one of Pearson's most commercially successful boats. [1] [2] [7] [8]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The Pearson Triton, sometimes referred to as a Triton 28, is an American sailboat that was designed by Carl Alberg as a racer-cruiser and first built in 1958. It was introduced at the 1959 National Boat Show in New York City and was one of the first fiberglass boat designs built.
The Catalina 30 is a small recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim.It has a masthead sloop rig, an internally-mounted spade-type rudder and a fixed fin keel.
1983: W. Shad Turner: Laguna Yachts [607] Laguna 24S: 1980: W. Shad Turner: Laguna Yachts [608] Laguna 26: 1982: W. Shad Turner: Laguna Yachts [609] Laguna 30: 1983: W. Shad Turner: Laguna Yachts [610] Laguna 33: 1986: W. Shad Turner: Laguna Yachts [611] Laminex Pocket Rocket: 1983: Gary Mull: Laminex Industries [612] Amy Landfall 39: 1974: Ron ...
J/22. The J/22 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass over a Baltex core, with teak wood trim. It has a fractional sloop rig with aluminum spars, a raked stem, a plumb transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed fin keel.