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High Performance Cruising Dufour's new 40 leads
their new line change
by David McCreary
boats.com Dufour Yachts of France is
expanding their line of yachts with three new Dufour
series models in the coming months and will be
phasing out their Classic line. Dufour isn't using
the term "racer-cruiser" to describe the new boats,
in recognition of their current consumer base who
aren't racing their Dufours. They've chosen the term
"High Performance Cruising" which one could fairly
apply to plenty of boats touting themselves as
racer-cruisers which won't be raced.
Dufour's consumer base in the mid to late 70s did
plenty of racing, however, and the upgrade of the
Classic line to more modern, faster hull designs
brings Dufour full circle in the U.S. It's first
entry into this market (Dufour was the first
French-built production sailboat line sold here) was
a half-ton racer named Arpege. Dufour sold a lot of
Arpeges, and a lot of people raced them (designer
Bob Perry, for one, raced on one in the 1974 Chicago
to Mac). Dufour disappeared from the US market in
the 80s, returned in the 90s with the Classic line
of boats there were sold as "fast cruisers". Some
accomodations were made for the US market, most
notably raising the headroom inside the 38 to 6'5".
Dufour was recently acquired by Italy's Cantiere
del Pardo, the company who builds the Grand Soleil
line. With the new Dufour Series, Cantiere Del Pardo
now has a broad market spread: the Dufour Gib'Sea
line are budget-minded Family Cruisers, the Dufour
Series line fills the Performance Cruising market,
and the Grand Soleil line covers the high-end, Grand
Prix / IMS market. The European order book for Grand
Soleil's is so overbooked they have had no incentive
to import into the U.S.: if you want one, you get
one in Italy.
The first boat in the new Dufour series is the
Dufour 40, making its debut at the Cannes, France
boatshow on September 11-16. The 40 features a
vacuum injected deck, allowing a weight savings of
30% over their previous construction methods and
allowing 3" more headroom. The hull layup is vacuum
bagged PVC/Glass/Kevlar sandwich, assuring rigidity
and more weight savings. The center of gravity is
moved center and down, providing for a smoother
passage in a seaway and a seakindly helm.
Some obvious design features mark the new 40 as a
big departure from the Classic line: the plumb bow,
Farr 395-style cockpit with a very large wheel, and
the traveller location - directly in front of the
binnacle and imbedded in the cockpit floor. Cantiere
del Pardo had Italy's Felci Yacht Design draw the
lines for its Grand Soleil 44, which has done
extremely well in European IMS circuits this spring
and summer. They went back to the well again for the
Dufour 40, bringing Felci's racing and Fast Cruiser
experience to bear on this new boat.
Dufour is offering three interior layouts in the
40:
- 3 cabin version with 2 heads (vberth forward
with one head forward, one amidships to starboard
- 3 cabin version with one head, featuring a
double berth on the port side forward, replacing
the v-berth, midship head
- 2 cabin version, the aft starboard cabin being
replaced by a sail locker accessible from the
cockpit, and a separate shower stall. (This
version will be the only one imported to the US in
2002).
Many owners of the Dufour Gib'sea line have
favored the port-side forward berth, it gives a
passageway into the cabin and saves one from
clambering onto the v-berth and then swinging your
legs around into the sleeping position. The side
berth gives a sense of much greater space with
little loss of sleeping room.
After the Cannes show, the Dufour 40 will be
presented at the Grand Pavois show in LaRochelle
France September 18-23, Genoa Boatshow October 5-13,
Hamburg October 26 - November 3, the Paris Boat Show
starting on December 16, and the London Boatshow
starting January 2.
The first North American viewing of the 40 will
be at the Toronto Boat Show in January, followed by
Strictly Sail Chicago in February.
Base price for the boat is $186,000 US$, but with the
most common packages of additional cruising gear and
electronics, a reasonable sailaway price should be
about $210,000 US$.
The next boats in the new line are a 34 footer
and a 44, Dufour will have prototypes of each on
display at the Paris Boat Show.
Specifications
| Length |
40' 8" |
12.32m |
| Beam |
12' 10" |
3.90m |
| Shoal Draft |
5' 3" |
1.60m |
| Deep Draft |
6' 11" |
2.10m |
| Displacement |
16,133 lbs |
7,300 kg * |
| Sail Area |
958 sq. ft. |
98 m2 |
| Water |
92 gal. |
348 liters |
| Fuel (diesel) |
42 gal. |
159 liters |

Shoal Draft is standard draft
*Deep Draft Displacement
Designer: Umberto Felci
Deck & Layout by: Patrick Roseo
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