42' 1990 Colvin Gazelle 42 ***SOLD***
Junk Rigged Schooner!!!
Type: | Sailboat | Year: | 1990 | Make: | Colvin |
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Model: | Gazelle 42 ***SOLD*** |
Length: | 42' |
Status: | Sold | Price: | $ 44,000 | Location: | Mission, BC |
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Date Posted: | 2020-06-16 |
360° Photos
LOCATION: MISSION, BRITISH COLUMBIA
OLIVIA PAGNOTTARO - VANCOUVER YACHT SALES - 1-833-UCYACHT EXT 8
The steel hulled junk rigged schooner – the Gazelle 42 – was American boat designer Thomas Colvin’s most successful vessel, great for coastal cruising or offshore passages.
This Gazelle 42 is a very safe and simple vessel, offered for sale in excellent condition by the original owner. The boat was built professionally by Horizon Yachts in BC in 1990 using 10 gauge steel, with ½” steel in the keel sections. The original plywood roof was removed, and rebuilt in steel to increase the safety & longevity of the vessel. At the same time, extra ballast and 4” was added to the keel on recommendation from the designer. The hull was recently repainted above and below the waterline, is rust free and ready to go.
The junk rig is a safe, secure and very easy to sail. With full sail up, this unique vessel is very pretty and will turn heads. The extendable bowsprit reduces the LOA and your marina fees, while providing plenty of power out on the water. Wide side decks make moving fore and aft easy, and the solid lifelines and the center helm make this is an extremely safe vessel. Plus with sleeping accommodations for up to 7, there is room for the whole family. But perhaps best of all, this boat was repowered in 2018 with a brand new 28 hp Volvo Penta diesel engine with only 42 hours!!!
Please see full inventory, description, photos and 360 degree images to learn more!
Additional Specs, Equipment and Information:
Specs
Builder: Horizon Yachts in BC
Designer: Thomas Colvin
Flag of Registry: Canada
Keel: Full
Hull Shape: Monohull
Dimensions
LOA: 42 ft 0 in
Beam: 12 ft 0 in
Maximum Draft: 4 ft 2 in
Displacement: 18168 lbs
Ballast: 6000 lbs
Engines
Total Power: 28 HP
Engine 1:
Engine Brand: Volvo Penta
Year Built: 2018
Engine Model: D1-30F
Engine Type: Inboard
Engine/Fuel Type: Diesel
Engine Hours: 42
Propeller: 2 blade propeller
Drive Type: Direct Drive
Engine Power: 28 HP
Tanks
Fresh Water Tanks: (80 Gallons)
Fuel Tanks: (40 Gallons)
Holding Tanks: Plastic (15 Gallons)
Accommodations
Number of single berths: 7
Number of cabins: 2
Number of heads: 1
Electronics
Depthsounder
Log-speedometer
Compass
VHF
Sails
Fully battened mainsail
Storm jib
Rigging
Steering wheel
Inside Equipment
Electric bilge pump
Manual bilge pump
Battery charger
Heating
Oven
Marine head
Electrical Equipment
Shore power inlet
Outside Equipment/Extras
Swimming ladder
Davits
Tender
Manual windlass
Covers
Bimini Top
Mainsail cover
Lazyjacks
Inventory
MECHANICAL
- Volvo Penta D1-30F diesel engine – 28HP & only 42 hours (New 2018)
- Double Racor fuel filters/ water separators
- Fixed 2-blade prop
- Lasdrop dripless shaft seal
- Wagner hydraulic steering
- Rule automatic electric bilge pump
- Whale manual bilge pump
- Simpson Lawrence manual windlass with gypsy & capstan
- CQR anchor with 75’ chain & 200’ rode
- Spare Danforth anchor
ELECTRICAL
- Motormaster Nautilus battery charger
- 30 amp shore power hook up
- 1 x Start battery
- 2 x House batteries
- Mix of LED & fluorescent lights
- Battery monitor
SAILING
- Aluminum masts & booms
- Standing rigging with dead eyes & belaying pins
- Extendable bowsprit – increases LOA to 48’
- Mainsail & foresail – junk rigged with powder coated aluminum batons & yards
- Hank-on jib
- Storm jib
- Triangular triadic sail (fills gap aloft between mainsail & foresail)
- Lazy jacks
- 1 x Harken self-tailing winch (for hoisting mainsail)
HELM & NAVIGATION
- Azimuth 1000 flux gate compass
- Raymarine ST40 Bidata - depth & speed
- Standard Horizon Eclipse VHF marine radio
- Handheld VHF marine radio
EXTERIOR
- Hull repainted (2017)
- Deck repainted with new non-skip (2018)
- Bottom paint (New 2017)
- Solid welded life lines provide excellent safety
- Aluminum framed hard bimini – frame completed, cover to be completed by buyer accordingly to their specifications
- 2 x Deck mounted storage lockers forward house two 25 lbs propane tanks
- Aluminum re-boarding ladder/ swim ladder
- Wrap around bench seating at stern
INTERIOR
- Dickinson Newport diesel heater with separate day tank
- All port holes open giving excellent ventilation and airflow
- 8 x Custom cast aluminum ports in salon – larger than normal for increase natural light
- Dinette converts in double berth
- Large storage lockers in forward cabin under beds
- Hanging locker in engine room/ cargo area
- Carpet interior flooring (New June 2020)
- Plenty of storage throughout
GALLEY
- Double basin sink with manual water supply
- Force 10 gimbaled 2-burner propane stove with oven
- Xintex S-2A propane solenoid with safety sensor
- Large ice box (cold plates included but not installed)
HEAD
- Stainless steel sink with manual water supply
- Jabsco marine toilet (New 2020)
- Plastic 15 gallon holding tank with Y-valve for overboard discharge
PLEASE CONTACT SAMUEL DICKSON - VANCOUVER YACHTS SALES - 1-833-UCYACHT EXT 7
DINGHY
- Walker Bay rigid inflatable 275H dinghy with oars
- Dinghy davits on the stern
Design History & Description
From Wavetrain.net:
American shipwright and boat designer Thomas Colvin, who has long championed both metal construction and junk rigs on cruising sailboats, has designed about 300 small ships and boats over the course of a career that has now spanned about 70 years. He designed the original Gazelle for himself and his family to cruise aboard way back in 1967. The Gazelle has since proven to be both his most successful and perhaps most interesting creation, with over 700 sisterships launched to date.
The first Gazelle was conceived as a no-frills light-displacement boat that could function both as a shoal-draft coastal cruiser on Chesapeake Bay, where Colvin was based at the time, and as a bluewater cruiser. She was built of 10-gauge Corten steel. Her most distinctive feature was her schooner rig, which consisted of two Chinese junk sails mounted on lightly stayed aluminum masts with a Western-style triangular jib out front flying from a long bowsprit. She also carried a triangular “fisherman” sail between her masts or sometimes flew a loose-luffed reaching staysail from her main masthead.
By all accounts the first Gazelle sailed well, as is reflected in her performance ratios. She balanced well on all points of sail, her helm required little attention, except when running dead downwind, and she was reasonably fast. Colvin reported hitting speeds of around 9 knots sailing his boat. Thanks to her narrow beam, shoal draft, and generous sail plan, she also needed reefing early, which is easy to do on any junk-rigged vessel.
The interior lay-out is similar to those seen on modern center-cockpit boats, except there is no cockpit. Instead the helmsman is stationed on a flush-decked area between the main and aft cabins, directly abaft the mainmast and directly over the engine or cargo area.
The main cabin connects to the aft cabin below deck via the engine or cargo area, which has only stooping headroom. The main cabin does have full standing headroom and the forepeak has a narrow V-berth bisected by the keel-stepped foremast, which precludes installing a filler section to make the berth a double.
PLEASE CONTACT OLIVIA PAGNOTTARO - VANCOUVER YACHT SALES - 1-833-UCYACHT EXT 8