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Copyright © 2009-2010 Schulz Boat Co.
Watch the Shoalsailer 35, (predecessor to the Shannon 53HPS) video online
FROM LOFTING TO LAUNCHING: The Shannon 53HPS Chronology
With a roller furling boom mainsail and headsails on roller furling all the winch work and sail handling is kept to a minimum. The hull and deck profile and center of gravity is kept low for seaworthiness and all the glass has Lexan storm shutters for safety. Of course the unique patented hull shape combined with the mast and sails preclude the rolling motion found in trawlers. The Shannon 53 HPS cockpit with twin outside helms is aft (where it belongs) protected by a dodger and a sun bimini and placed where docking and tight spot visibility both forward and aft is excellent. It is possible to go from the bow to the stern on an outside deck without going through the interior for quick line handling when docking. Docking stern to, you just step off the swim platform to the docking, without having to make a Flying Wallendas’ “Jump for Life” from a hull with high freeboard. There is a weather protected aft lounge deck that has drop curtains and screens, and a transom door to the big swim platform. Above the aft deck is the perfect spot for a dinghy. Like all Shannons since 1975 the interior layouts of the Shannon 53 HPS are totally custom-to-order and only limited by imagination. Because of the greater beam carried aft there is more interior volume available than a conventional sailboat hull, so there is room for up to four sleeping cabins. The engine room provides great access to all the systems and equipment, with room for all those extras like air conditioners, watermakers, fuel polishers, inverters, etc. And the view from the wheelhouse helm and seating is as nice as the view from a trawler on a rainy day. And for people looking to travel the Intercoastal Waterway (which is still possible if the draft is under 5’ like the draft of the 53 HPS), my three decades of experience with Shannon ketch rigs prompted me to provide the Shannon exclusive Sketch rig that is only 64’ tall for the 53 HPS.
A single masted Scutter rig with a higher rig is also available.
This “laundry list” of what people asked me to achieve in the Shannon 53 HPS design is very long, and it has been the greatest challenge of my career at Shannon and has utilized all the yacht design skill and experience that I have acquired since I founded Shannon in 1975. I would be curious to know what you think, and even better to have the chance to meet with you here in Bristol, RI and then hear your comments.
W.S


The Shannon 53 HPS is a new solution to the shortcomings of motorsailers and trawlers. As I indicated earlier, I take no credit for the genesis of my earlier drawings into this final design as I was just responding to the positive input from a bunch of nice people who wanted more than the currently available boat designs. By geometrically up-sizing the proven sailing design features of the Shannon Shoalsailer 32/35 (WATCH THE SHOALSAILER SAILING VIDEO) and coupling them up using the sophisticated Multi-surf hydrodynamic computer software with what I have learned from the fuel efficiency of my SRD powerboats (both designs with U.S. patents), I created a new hull design that will sail to windward with no leeway in only 4.75 feet of water without having to drop a deep centerboard. The design incorporates fixed, shallow dagger boards that do not increase the 4.75 feet of draft. Implausible as it may sound to someone who has never heard of or seen the Shoalsailer, after seven years and numerous Shoalsailer 32/35’s sailing in wind and sea condition varying from a zephyr to almost a hurricane, including to windward, with only 30 inches of sailing draft, the hull design concept really works. The 53 HPS will cruise under power at 12 knots with a single 150HP engine or twin 75HP diesels. Once again, the performance of the 53HPS is based on the Shoalsailer 32/35 hull with engine size and powering speed ratios that break the displacement hull barrier, producing speeds of the square root of the waterline times 1.6, a 23% improvement in speed over a sailboat and just about the same speeds that semi-displacement Down East lobster yachts run at. By incorporating the modern styling of a plumb bow and reverse transom, the waterline length of the Shannon 53 HPS virtually equals her on deck measurement, and a longer waterline length equals greater speeds. Concerning propulsion, the 53 HPS was designed to accommodate both single and twin engines. While a single motor is simpler, twins offer redundancy, and with twin motors, I plan to angle the motors 5 degrees inboard so that the leeward engine can be used to power sail even if the boat is heeled. A motor cannot be run safely when the boat is heeled more than 10 degrees as such an angle inhibits the proper circulation of the crankcase oil. Assuming the engine(s) keeps running, the Shannon 53 HPS (high powered sailer) will travel over 1500 miles under power alone. And if the start button is pushed and the motor doesn’t start or if there is no fuel at the marina, the Shannon 53 HPS can be sailed home. Don’t try that with a trawler/motorsailer.
The new Shannon 53 HPS (High Power Sailboat) is my first design ever that was done in “response to popular demand”, as the saying goes. During my over thirty years as the designer here at Shannon, I have always been intrigued with the comfort gained by having a sailboat with an interior helm. I never understood the appeal of raised deck salon sailboats that came so close, but failed to give enough visibility to operate the boat inside out of the elements. The Shannon Pilot 38, Pilot 43 and the 52 Global are true sailboats with a conventional cockpit and a wheelhouse providing two steering stations, making them boats for all the seasons. However, to gain good sailing ability, the top speed of the Shannon Pilots were limited by the characteristics of a displacement hull, based on the formula of top speed equals the square root of the waterline times 1.3. This challenge of how to balance sailing and powering performance has been addressed in different ways over the last century. My hobby is wooden boat restorations, and one of the most intriguing boats that I have taken in is a 1930 45’ motorsailer by William Hand. Hand was one of America’s preeminent yacht designers during the 1920’s and 1930’s, and his series of motorsailers continues to be acclaimed today, even though they followed the true motorsailer rule of propulsion achieved 50% by the engine and 50% by the sails. Hand motorsailers power well, and gain stability from the short rig but do not have any real speed under sail alone.

