That looks really quick and easy. But only when you have flat water and enough space. In reality it is not always simple. I have my boat in Cuxhaven and have to attach at least three fenders on both sides and this ist sometimes difficult , because there are no attachment points and I have to remove some of these before I unfold the boat. Usually I have irregular waves and and many ships in this area and the Boat handling is sometimes difficult. The same procedure when I come back in the harbour. When there is not enough space I must fold the baot outside the port, which is normally not recommended.
Thanks for your comments. The bow and stern fenders are easily secured to the pulpit and pushpit, and my mid-ship one hooks onto the u-bolt on the wing. I also have flat fenders secured to my berth, so only need to fit fenders one side on the water. Have you tried facing stern into the wind with the motor in reverse for folding?- this way the boat ‘hangs’ by the engine and doesn’t move around much.
Thanks for your comment, but I'd recommend a larger Dragonfly than this trailerable DF 25 for that trip. Dragonfly 40 would be a joy for long-range cruising.
Suggestion/question : where’s the kill cord for that engine? Do you think would be a good idea when “sailing” solo that, after any reverse manouvre is done, have a killcord , while motoring trough the harbour… a kill cord extended and dunken to transom with a floaty at the end… at least if you fall, you have hope to stop your vessel? Just wondering, everytime I see an engine on a boat… is there someone there 100% or not?
Hi Stefano, thanks for your comment and it's an interesting idea. However as you can see, there is no need to leave the DF 25 cockpit until the boat is unfolded. At this point it is an incredibly stable platform almost 6m wide, so the risk of falling is much lower than on some boats
Hi David, thanks for watching, but a Dragonfly is far more than your summary suggests. This is a high performance folding trimaran which can often sail at windspeed, and exceed 20 knots on a good day (see our other recent videos). The materials and construction methods required to achieve this inevitably cost more than a similar sized cruising yacht. However its unique combination of quality and performance resulted in Dragonfly 25 being awarded the title of 'European Yacht of the Year 2016' in the multihull category, and over 100 have been built.
Fellas, anything this fast...with this state of the art engineering...hi tech sails and all the go fast gear...if you are a racer...you pay the piper or go home and are never near the top flight guys....EVER!!!@@DragonflyTrimarans-UK
As a motoryacht fan, this is the first sailing vessel I'd like to learn the ropes of.
Its the best sailboat❤❤❤
Thank you. DF 25 is beautifully designed and built, and lots of fun to sail
I love this ! Cool boat and some slick boat handling.
Thanks for your comment. It really is easy to handle, as all the systems are so well designed and built.
very good boat very good and cool and i love it so much omg
Thanks for watching, and glad you like it. Check out our other videos of it sailing fast too
Love these sailboats !!! GG Rebimik
Thank you, and we're with you there
That looks really quick and easy. But only when you have flat water and enough space. In reality it is not always simple. I have my boat in Cuxhaven and have to attach at least three fenders on both sides and this ist sometimes difficult , because there are no attachment points and I have to remove some of these before I unfold the boat. Usually I have irregular waves and and many ships in this area and the Boat handling is sometimes difficult. The same procedure when I come back in the harbour. When there is not enough space I must fold the baot outside the port, which is normally not recommended.
Thanks for your comments. The bow and stern fenders are easily secured to the pulpit and pushpit, and my mid-ship one hooks onto the u-bolt on the wing. I also have flat fenders secured to my berth, so only need to fit fenders one side on the water.
Have you tried facing stern into the wind with the motor in reverse for folding?- this way the boat ‘hangs’ by the engine and doesn’t move around much.
@@DragonflyTrimarans-UK no, I haven't tried that yet. thanks for the tip.
Love the skippers who share their knowledge base for us lesser ones. Good job Skip.@@DragonflyTrimarans-UK
@@alansmith2203 thanks for your support
Very steady and fast. I wonder how long it would take from the UK to say outside of Mexico!?
Thanks for your comment, but I'd recommend a larger Dragonfly than this trailerable DF 25 for that trip. Dragonfly 40 would be a joy for long-range cruising.
I like the tiller tamer. Does it come standard with the boat? Or is it aftermarket? If its aftermarket, who makes the device?
it’s simply a length of shock cord, hooked over the tiller extension mount.
Very neat.
Thanks!
Классный катамаран!
Вообще-то это тримаран )))
Thanks, but it’s a trimaran (catamaran has only 2 hulls), which allows this easy folding system.
Suggestion/question : where’s the kill cord for that engine? Do you think would be a good idea when “sailing” solo that, after any reverse manouvre is done, have a killcord , while motoring trough the harbour… a kill cord extended and dunken to transom with a floaty at the end… at least if you fall, you have hope to stop your vessel? Just wondering, everytime I see an engine on a boat… is there someone there 100% or not?
Hi Stefano, thanks for your comment and it's an interesting idea. However as you can see, there is no need to leave the DF 25 cockpit until the boat is unfolded. At this point it is an incredibly stable platform almost 6m wide, so the risk of falling is much lower than on some boats
Second Nature!
Just check out the price..... hells teeth.... for a small collection of plastic boxes...
Hi David, thanks for watching, but a Dragonfly is far more than your summary suggests. This is a high performance folding trimaran which can often sail at windspeed, and exceed 20 knots on a good day (see our other recent videos). The materials and construction methods required to achieve this inevitably cost more than a similar sized cruising yacht. However its unique combination of quality and performance resulted in Dragonfly 25 being awarded the title of 'European Yacht of the Year 2016' in the multihull category, and over 100 have been built.
Fellas, anything this fast...with this state of the art engineering...hi tech sails and all the go fast gear...if you are a racer...you pay the piper or go home and are never near the top flight guys....EVER!!!@@DragonflyTrimarans-UK