The Swan 65 is a large
Fibre glass
Fiberglass (American English) or fibreglass ( Commonwealth English) is a common type of fiber-reinforced plastic using glass fiber. The fibers may be randomly arranged, flattened into a sheet called a chopped strand mat, or woven into glass c ...
fin+keeled
masthead
Masthead may refer to:
* Nameplate (publishing), the banner name on the front page of a newspaper or periodical (UK "masthead")
* Masthead (American publishing), details of the owners, publisher, departments, officers, contributors and address d ...
ketch- or
sloop
A sloop is a sailboat with a single mast typically having only one headsail in front of the mast and one mainsail aft of (behind) the mast. Such an arrangement is called a fore-and-aft rig, and can be rigged as a Bermuda rig with triangular sa ...
-rigged sailing yacht design, manufactured by
Nautor's Swan
Oy Nautor AB is a Finnish producer of luxury sailing yachts, based in Jakobstad. It is known for its ''Nautor's Swan'' range of yachts models. The company was founded in 1966 by Pekka Koskenkylä.
The designers
Nautor has worked with four ...
. It was introduced as the new flagship of Nautor in 1973. At the time of its launch it was the largest GRP constructed yacht in the market and because of its excellent racing history, one of the most famous Swan models ever built. The first 65-footers were delivered to owners in 1973, and the production continued until 1989 with 41 hulls being built in total.
The yacht was designed by
Sparkman & Stephens
Sparkman & Stephens is a naval architecture and yacht brokerage firm with offices in Newport, Rhode Island and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA. The firm performs design and engineering of new and existing vessels for pleasure, commercial, and milita ...
which was considered by many, the number one yacht design company at the time. Swan 65 was designed to
I.O.R Mk III to fulfil the continuously increasing demand for bigger sailing/racing yachts in the market. In order to meet this demand Nautor had asked
Olin Stephens to design a beautiful, fast and safe sailing yacht to continue the development of Swan range. Stephens combined the requested characteristics in a fiberglass hull together with a luxurious interior and technical features that were then current in successful racing boats.
Its main dimensions are length overall LOA 19,9 m, Length of waterline LWL 14,33 m Beam 4,98 m. Up until the hull #019, the
displacement was 31800 kg of which 10400 kg was
ballast. From the hull #020 onwards the ballast was increased to 13900 kg resulting to a displacement of 35300 kg. Therefore, for the first 19 hulls the ballast to weight ratio was 31% which was then increased to 39% for the rest of the production. Although it replaced Swan 55 as the flagship of Nautor, the yacht has no actual predecessor in the Nautors own range and according to the designers comments the design is based on a successful American aluminium yacht Dora IV.
Racing success
After the breakthrough in 1968 Cowes Week, Swans continued to score famous victories in the early seventies by winning several famous races including the Bermuda Race in 1972 and 1992 by
Swan 48
Swan 48 is a GRP constructed, fin keeled, masthead sloop or yawl designed by Sparkman & Stephens with a design number 2079 and manufactured by Nautor Oy. The original 48 was designed to rate under the I.O.R. and at the same time to offer the ...
and most notably in 1973–1974, when a brand new ketch rigged Swan 65 by the name ''
Sayula II
''Sayula II'' is a Swan 65 yacht designed by Sparkman & Stephens
Sparkman & Stephens is a naval architecture and yacht brokerage firm with offices in Newport, Rhode Island and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA. The firm performs design and engineeri ...
'' won the first ever
Whitbread Round the World Race (currently known as The Ocean Race) skippered by Ramon Carlin.
It took 133 days and 13 hours for Sayula II to sail the full race distance of 32,500 nautical miles.
In 2016, this adventure was presented in a documentary film called The Weeked Sailor.
The success of Swan 65 in the
Whitbread Round the World Race didn't end there as in the next Whitbread Round the World Race in 1977–1978 “Swan 65” scored 2nd, 4th (''Disque d’Or''), and 5th positions. This time the best result was presented by a sloop called ''
King's Legend'' (Time 121 days and 11 hours) skippered by Nick Ratcliffe and Skip Novak as the navigator, which finished in second place getting narrowly defeated by
Conny van Rietschotens ''
Flyer'' which was a 65 ft
S & S designed purpose built racing yacht manufactured by
Royal Huisman.
In the same year
Clare Francis
Clare Mary Francis (born 17 April 1946) is a British novelist who was first known for her career as a yachtswoman who has twice sailed across the Atlantic on her own and she was the first woman to captain a successful boat on the Whitbread ...
the first female skipper to compete in the race, finished fifth in her Swan65 ''ADC Accutrac'' (Time 126 days 20 hours).
In 1981–1982 edition of the race Swan 65 made one final appearance at the top end of the round the world race scoreboard with Xargo III finishing sixth and this time beating also a boat called Alaska Eagle (Originally called
Flyer).
Therefore, the total score of Swan 65 in three different editions of Whitbread Around the World Race are positions 1st,2nd,4th,5th and 6th.
Later on Swan 65 also won a number of less famous trans ocean races such as the
Parmelia Race in 1979 when Independent Endeavour Skippered by Skip Novak took the line honours and the overall win.
This racing success combined with the earlier achievements of
Swan 36 significantly increased the Swan brand awareness around the world and secured its place as a successful Finnish industrial product. The legacy of Swan 65 was continued in 1982 by its
German Frers designed successor Swan 651 which finished third (Fazer Finland) in 1985–86 Whitbread Round the World Race.
Spars and rigging

Ketch or sloop rig with aluminum spars and stainless steel standing and running rigging. Main (24m) mast has double aluminum in line
spreaders and mizzen mast is with single spreaders. Standing rig with stainless steel wire rope with Norseman swageless terminals and consists of headstay, main backstay, the mizzen forward support is done using intermediate shrouds or a triatic stay,
mizzen backstay, single upper shrouds and double lowers on main, single uppers and lowers on mizzen. Main, mizzen and spinnaker booms are aluminum. The original winches were manufactured by Lewmar and Barlow.
Swan 65 has two
spinnaker poles because gybeing large spinnakers by dipping the pole is considered too dangerous. With only one spinnaker pole operational ADC Accutrac performed gybes by lowering the spinnaker, repacking it and hoisting it up again on the other side. (Clare Francis 1978)
Construction and main equipment
Molded polyester fiberglass hull with no core. Hull is hand laid woven rowing, mat and fiberglass cloth. Deck and deckhouse are foam cored sandwich structure between layers of glass and polyester resin. Additional reinforcement is provided through the use of fiberglass stiffeners. All construction was made according to Lloyd's Register. Because the boat was in production for such a long time the type of engine had to be changed three times. The first hulls were equipped with a Volvo MD32 engine which was soon changed to Perkins H6.354M. This type was used until the production of the engine was discontinued and the engine was changed back to Volvo but this time type was TMD41A. Much of the deck gear, blocks and fittings were manufactured in-house by Nautor simply because most of the parts available in the market were designed for much smaller boats and there were very little deck gear and other equipment available for a boat of this size.
Accommodation
The Swan 65 sleeps 12 in four cabin spaces - two in forecastle in pipe cots, four in two forward cabins in pilot berths, three in main cabin in pilot berths and convertible settee, and three in a single and a double berth in the aft cabin.
[http://www.classicswan.org/upload/articles_swan/2016_10_18_22_53_54-2004_yachtingworld_swan_65.pdf ] The saloon is roomy and not as dark as the narrow coach roof windows might suggest. Below the decks the sixty five offers very good combination of ocean going practicality and comfort as the berths are relatively small and secure, but the galley and chart table areas as well as the dining area are large, well equipped and very practical. A cut out in the bulkhead allows passing items and communication between the galley and the U- Shaped dining area. On some sixty fives this bulkhead is solid while on others it's completely open with just a pillar running from the lower part of the bulkhead to the deck head. Forward of the saloon are two matching guest cabins with upper and lower single berths parallel to the centerline.
Two forward
heads
A head is the part of an organism which usually includes the ears, brain, forehead, cheeks, chin, eyes, nose, and mouth, each of which aid in various sensory functions such as sight, hearing, smell, and taste. Some very simple animals may no ...
with WC lavatory and shower. The owners stateroom in the aft is very spacious, having a double and a single berth, dressing table, cupboards and wardrobes and with WC lavatory and shower. The U-Shaped galley is large, well ventilated and equipped with double stainless steel sink, pressure water system, water heater, top opening refrigerator and deep freeze range/oven and ample storage areas.
Throughout the history of Nautor the yard has provided their customers with a chance to choose the interior materials and lay-out to suit their liking which is why some of the interior arrangements deviate from the standard. Some yachts like Sayula II has even a small workshop fitted inside the boat to make repairs at sea easier.
File:SSMot 0 143 copia.jpg, Swan 65 Odile Marie Saloon
File:SSMot 0 206 copia.jpg, Swan 65 Odile Marie Pentry
File:SSMot 0 84 copia.jpg, Swan 65 Odile Marie aft cabin
File:SSMot 0 8.jpg, Swan 65 Odile Marie port cabin
File:SSMot 0 32 copia.jpg, Odile Marie front head
File:SSMot 0 15 copia.jpg, Odile Marie aft head
References
Literature
* Clare Francis, ''Come Wind or Weather: ADC Accutrac Races Round the World,'' Pelham Books, London, 1978,
* Cornelis Van Rietschoten, Barry Pickthall, ''Flyer: The Quest to Win the Round the World Race,'' W W Norton & Co Inc, 1980,
External links
Nautor SwanClassic Swan Owner
More information
*
Whitbread History, Krister.tv*
*
Videos
*
*
*
*
{{Sailboat types built by Nautor Swan
Sailing yachts
Keelboats
1970s sailboat type designs
Sailboat types built by Nautor Swan
Sailboat type designs by Olin Stephens
Sailboat type designs by Sparkman and Stephens