Dufour
34 - Sailing
Magazine
April 2003
By Bob
Perry
Performance
Cruiser
From
designers
Umberto
Felci and
Patrick
Roseo comes
this new
34-footer
built in
France by
Dufour. It's
another
cruiser-racer,
a type we
are seeing
more
frequently.
This is a
very nice
looking
boat. Like
many in this
category,
its styling
looks
derivative of the early Nautor
boats, with
wedgelike
cabintrunk
profiles and
low cockpit
coamings
The L/B
of this
design is a
very beamy
3.02. This
clearly puts
this model
in the
cruiser-racer
category and
not the
racer-cruiser
category.
Beam
increases
interior
volume, and
that's
probably why
we are
seeing it on
this design.
The D/L from
my estimated
DWL of 31
feet is 148.
You can have
either a
shoal-draft
keel drawing
4 feet, 7
inches or
the deeper
keel drawing
5 feet, 11
inches. The
deep keel is
very
shapely, but
I'm not sure
why it is
this shape.
You can
choose from
two
interiors.
There is one
model with
mirror-image
double
quarterberth
cabins and
the head
forward. The
other layout
has one
double
quarterberth
cabin and
the head
aft. The
head-aft
version
makes for a
bigger
forward
stateroom
and offers a
reasonable
sized
lazaretto.
You wouldn't
call this
boat roomy;
after all
it's only 34
feet, 5
inches LOA.
The galley
and nav
areas are
minimal.
But if
you ignore
the missing
inches here
and there
this layout
is very
complete and
should make
for
comfortable
cruising.
The wet
locker
immediately
aft of the
nav station
appears to
be 10 inches
wide. Note
that if you
go with the
head-forward
model, the
double
V-berth has
one side
truncated to
accommodate
the volume
of the head.
So, if your
wife if 6
feet, 3
inches tall
I suspect
this layout
will not
work.
Rigs have
become so
generic
these days
that it
reminds me
of the late
1960s when
all we saw
were
masthead,
single-spreader
rigs with
big
foretriangles.
Somehow I
don't miss
the old 180
percent
genoas of
those 15.5
SA/D ratios.
The rig of
today for
either
racing or
cruising is
a fractional
rig with at
least two
spreaders,
preferably
swept, and a
short,
overlapping
genoa.
Mainsails
have enough
roach to
them today
to overlap
the
backstay.
The bigger
the mainsail
in
proportion
to the
overall size
of the rig,
the less
importance
you will
have to
place on jib
selection.
Ideally, all
your sail
reductions
and
depowering
would be
done with
mainsail and
you would
only use one
size jib.
You might
carry jibs
of different
weights but
the same
size for
varying wind
speeds. With
a furling
boom and
furling
genoa this
would be a
very easy
rig to
handle. The
SA/D is
17.8.
The deck
is
beautifully
sculpted.
The
mainsheet
traveler is
right in
front of the
big wheel on
the cockpit
but they are
cut down aft
in the way
of the
wheel. There
is a flush
anchor well
forward and
a short swim
step cut
into the
cockpit.
The aft
staterooms
have big
double
berths. I've
got an idea.
We need to
come up with
a name for
the maneuver
you have to
do in the
middle of
the night to
get out of a
berth
without
waking your
partner.
It's
impossible
for me to do
so with any
kind of
panache
given my
general
inflexibility,
and it
usually
results in
my crashing
to the cabin
sole with a
charley
horse in my
thigh
The hull
is vacuum
bagged with
Kevlar,
glass and
PVC foam.
The deck is
"vacuum
injected"
for a
claimed
weight
savings of
30 percent.
OBE:
$134,980
Our Best
Estimate of
the Sailaway
Price
Stylish and
seakindly
addition to
the French
builders
line
Designer:
Umberto
Felci
Builder:
Dufour SA
1 Rue Blaise
Pascal
17182
Perigny,
France
tel
011-335-46-30-07-60
US
importer:
Dufour
Yachts USA
1 Chelsea
Court,
Annapolis,
MD, 21403
tel.
410-268-6417,
fax
410-268-9739
|
LOA |
34'
5"
|
|
LWL |
29'
11"
|
|
Beam |
11'
10"
|
|
Draft-
Shoal |
4'
7" |
|
Draft-
Deep |
5'
11" |
|
Displacement |
9,900
lbs
|
|
Ballast |
3,300
lbs
|
|
Sail
area |
657
sq
ft
|
|
Fuel |
27
Gals
|
|
Water |
70
gals
|
|
Engine |
20-hp
Volvo
diesel
|
|
D/L |
148
|
|
L/B |
3.02 |
Manufacturers
Note: The
aft head
version is
the 2 Cabin
version. The
head is
moved
forward for
the 3 cabin
version of
the Dufour
34
This article
was written
by Bob Perry
and
published in
the April
2003 edition
of Sailing
Magazine.

|