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    J/105 For Sale, Details
    Trophies
    Chantecler got several trophies, including first to finish in Division 
    III of the 2002 Annapolis-Bermuda race, first in PHRF A1 in the 2003 Miles River Race Back, fourth in PHRF A1 in the 2004 Miles River Race Back 
    and a couple for Friday Night Beer Can Series.  
    
2003 Annapolis-Bermuda - First to finish - Division III 2003 Miles River Race Back - First - PHRF A1 2004 Miles River Race Back - Fourth place - PHRF A1  
 
 
 
  
    Boat features
    Factory specifications
    Factory specs that were applied to hull #536 :
    J105 Jcomposite Factory 
    specs.pdf 
    The anchor well
    
        | 
       Deck 
    accessed anchor well.  |  
     
    The bow sprit seals
    
        |  The bow 
      sprit tube has been custom sealed with the best available engineered 
      mechanical seals and thus made completely waterproof. We had to abandon the 2004 
      Annapolis-Bermuda race because too much water entered the forepeak through 
      the bow sprit tube in a squall. The problem was due to the poor OEM 
      outside seal that was not the best available in the business and did not 
      fit properly the spinnaker pole. This problem is not uncommon for bow 
      sprit asymmetrical spinnaker in production boats. There was a gap of about 3/8" between 
      the pole and the original bushings (see photo at right) and of about 1/4" 
      between the outside seal and the pole. There was no inside seal and also 
      the bow sprit tube drained into the anchor locker. This was a deficient 
      design and the problem was aggravated by my overloading of the forepeak 
      cabin for the race.  |  
        | 
       Upon return, Marc McAteer 
      of   
      and I 
      designed the solution for definitely sealing that leak area, with Marine 
      Plastics fabricating two new custom-made Delrin bushings fitting perfectly the pole 
      (the pole slides better than ever, with no play at all), 
      
        defining and supplying two 
      perfectly fitting lip seals and Muller Marine making the tube sleeve drain to 
      the outside well above water line instead of into the anchor well (which 
      then drains outside just above the water line). Picture at left is of the 
      outside seal viewed from above. |  
        | Picture below: inside seal connected to the aft face of the aft Delrin 
      bushing.
        |  
     
    The centerline speedometer
      
    Cabin layout
    
        | 
       The cabin 
      layout is improved 
    compared to TPI's Euro interior and includes a 
      gimbaled two-burner propane 
    stove on Port, next to the sink and a Starboard navigation table in a 
    central position forward of the berth and away from the companionway. The 
    two cabin berths with lee cloths and the Starboard quarter berth are good 
    sea-berths.  |  
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    Electronics
    
        | Fixed DSC VHF: Standard Horizon Intrepid GX 1260S. This is a DSC 
      (Digital Selective Calling) unit. A distress call from the unit includes 
      the boat's MMSID (Maritime Mobile Service Identity), which is 338 026 115, 
      and the Lat/Lon position (through a link to the GPS antenna). This web 
      page is for a slightly different model:
    
      Intrepid. Masthead antenna. Remote mike and speaker for full operation from the 
      wheel. |  
        | Silva Nexus Network instrument system with: log and temperature 
      tranducer, wind transducer, compass transducer, depth transducer, Raystar 120 WAAS-NMEA GPS, two Multi XL displays, one 
      Multi control display, one Wind NX2 display, one GPS display, two trim 
      buttons and remote control by the wheel.  |  
        | Shakespeare emergency VHF antenna |  
     
    Comfort
    
        | Water tank, 23.8 US gallons (as opposed to 20 US gallons for TPI 
      J/105s), under the Port cabin bunk. |  
        | ENO two-burner butane-propane (set for propane) stove. The propane 
      bottle is in its aft locker, behind the wheel and is properly ventilated 
      to the outside.  |  
        | One West Marine Ultra Cold 100 ice chest |  
        | 10 packs of 
      Techni-ice HDR (reusable dry ice packs) |  
     
    Safety and other equipment
    
        | Harken MKIII furling system |  
        | Loos RT 10M rod tension gauge |  
        | Bosun's chair |  
        | One electric bilge pump |  
        | One Gusher Urchin manual bilge pump in the cabin and one in the 
      cockpit |  
        | One Bekson handheld pump |  
        | Two jacklines |  
        | One horseshoe ring with flasher |  
        | One lifesling2 overboard rescue system |  
        | One Fortress FX-16 anchor with stowaway anchor bag; 20' of chain and 
      200' of line with anchor rode bag. |  
        | Three foam fenders and one large inflatable round fender |  
        | Shakespeare 5911 Emergency VHF antenna |  
        | Fog horn |  
        | West Marine EcoHorn rechargeable signal air horn |  
        | Two buckets |  
        | One folding radar reflector |  
        | Dock lines |  
        | One West Marine medical kit |  
        | Quartz Fire 12v spot light |  
        | Set of signal flags  |  
     
    PFDs, etc.
    
        | One infant PFD |  
        | Two Youth PFDs  |  
        | Two harness/inflatable PFDs |  
        | Two throwable floating cushions |  
        | Two inflatable PFDs belt pack |  
        | Two harnesses |  
        | Five harness teeters |  
        | One drifter drogue |  
        | One six-gallon fuel jerrycan |  
     
    OD Class Sails
    
        | 2002 North Sails sharkskin Main; used for one season and two months of 
      racing. |  
        | 2001 North Sails 3DL Class jib; sail used for one season of racing; one big patch in 
      the middle.  |  
        | 2001 North Sails 77 m2 class spinnaker; 0.75 oz but the tack area has 
      been reinforced to make it a heavy air spinnaker. |  
     
    Additional sails
    
        | All sails have been properly dried after each use. All sails have been 
      properly bagged and stored during winters in a room with dehumidifier on. 
      None have any mold spot. |  
        | Kevlar Main. North Sails; late 2003; paneled; bolt rope (the bolt rope 
      is more efficient, but if one want to use slides, they could easily be 
      added); two reefs; one full length batten; three leech battens; foot 
      shelf. The sail was used one season only (from September 2003 to September 
      2004) and is in excellent condition and racing shape. One minor patch has 
      been done early 2004; the tear was done when the main was on deck after we 
      doused it during a squall.  |  
        | Winter 2002/03 light/med North Sails Kevlar #1 155% genoa. Designed 
      originally for the 
      roller-furler and then recut to make the clew slightly higher when tacked 
      to the deck; in which case, the leech will trim just below top spreader 
      for better pointing. One hole at the leech and pinholes at the luff have 
      been patched. Regular use for one and half seasons. Good condition.  |  
        | 2002 UK Tape Drive 155% reacher (gold Kevlar tapes on a black Technora 
      scrim). This is a powerful offshore sail with deep entry and a high clew 
      that is sheeted to a block aft (like the spinnaker) and has a wide range 
      of apparent wind angles. More stable than the spinnaker in waves. Used 
      only a few times. Excellent condition.   |  
        | 1998 Tri-radial North Sails Kevlar heavy air #3 100% jib. Full hoist 
      for tacking to the deck. Flat sail with stiff battens. Used for one race 
      before 2002 and about four times a year since then. Good condition.  |  
        | 2001 Asymmetric code zero North Sails (#6124618-01) spinnaker. This is 
      a 66 m2 flat spinnaker made of 2.5 oz Norlon that can be hoisted and 
      doused either like a regular spinnaker or rolled on its own Schaefer 
      furler system. Condition as new.  |  
     
    Additional equipment
    
        | One awning that attaches to the lifelines and form a strong canopy 
      from the mast to the backstay; Shadetree model 230; color pearl grey; 
      dimensions 172" x 156"; four wands arcing from lifeline to lifeline.
       |  
     
      
      
      
    
      
        
        
            | The first page 
          of my J/105 subweb |  
            | The major 
          features of J105 hull #536 |  
            | 
          Don't miss this important technical bulletin on rudder bearings, 
          companionway slider stop, hull to deck joint, mast tuning and mast 
          bend, engine stop cable, bowsprit seals, and battery specs |  
            | The second 
          launch of my J-105 in Baltimore, from shrink wrap and cradle to the 
          water |  
            | The anchor 
          well, the bow sprit seals, the gimbaled two-burner propane stove, the 
          three sea berths with lee clothes, the instruments, the sails and 
          other details of the J105 |  
         
         | 
        
        
            | The V-berth, 
          the mast step, the sinks, the navigation table, the stove area, and 
          other views from the interior of the J/105 |  
            | The J105 
          under sail, upwind with genoa and main |  
            | The J 105 
          wheel, instrument remote, propane bottle locker, the genoa tracks, the 
          triple cabin top rope clutches, the foot rest for the main trimmer, 
          and the cabin top instrument cluster |  
            | The 
          J/105 masthead, the Sparcraft mast, which permits masthead asymmetric 
          spinnakers and the forehatch. |  
         
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    Something different
    Are you looking to buy a larger and more comfortable center cockpit 
    cruiser? 
    Try: 
    http://erodier2.home.comcast.net/Morgan4Sale/ 
    This boat is being sold by Ed Rodier, who is a member of Team Chantecler 
         | 
        
        Chantecler logo 
        (design by Salima Bentchicou-Gonord,
        Architecte DESA) 
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    This site was last updated
    05/08/10
     
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