| October 1, 2002

On Board: Pegasus 55
Light, fast, strong and comfortable—this yacht
sets the bar high
By Chris Caswell
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A shallow underbody, light displacement
and carefully distributed volume below the waterline allow
Pegasus 55 to exceed traditional speed/length
ratios.
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In
general, even custom yachts can be described independently of their
owners, but in the case of Pegasus 55, designed by Alan
Andrews, the owner and the yacht are inextricably entwined. Both are
as successful as they are unusual.
Phillipe Kahn burst upon the yachting scene several years ago
and, using the wealth from his computer technology companies,
quickly immersed himself in all aspects of the sport.
“I love sailing,” he said, “and I’m having a blast. My wife says
this is indeed my midlife crisis. It is, and it’s a perfect
mistress.”
Although Kahn’s only sailing experience was sailboarding as a
teenager in his native France, not long afterward, he owned three
Farr 40s, three Melges 24s and four Mumm 30s. He also kept a Swan 48
in San Francisco as a weekend getaway and for singlehanded racing,
plus a Finn for Olympic regattas.
Just as he’d done with his businesses (he founded Borland,
Starfish and now LightSurf), he immersed himself in sailing. But he
also knew he needed expert advice and, to that end, brought in
talent ranging from Olympic and America’s Cup sailor Morgan Larson
on the ocean-racing side to Star world champion Mark Reynolds for
his one-design efforts. The result is Team Pegasus, and Pegasus
55 is the latest addition to the fleet.
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The master stateroom is in the bow
immediately abaft the second watertight bulkhead. Paneling is
pecan.
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Andrews joined Team Pegasus when Kahn acquired the Andrews 70
Cheval. This yacht took line honors in the 1995 TransPac, and Kahn
brought in Andrews to upgrade the boat, renamed Pegasus 70, for the
1999 TransPac effort.
The new boat had to be light, fast, strong and comfortable. It
had to replace the Swan 48 for Kahn and his wife to use as a weekend
apartment and for daysailing, but it also had to be competitive in
ocean races. And it had to be easily singlehanded. For safety’s
sake, Kahn specified a high range of stability and a clutter-free
deck to allow the crew to move around without tripping.
Andrews’ success at combining the seemingly disparate elements of
weekend apartment and singlehanded racer was evident the minute I
stepped aboard Pegasus 55. Built at Goetz Custom Yachts in
Bristol, Rhode Island, under the project management of David Lake,
she has exceeded the expectations of everyone on the team.
Honey-tone teak decking seems to stretch unbroken in all
directions. Even the hardware for the teak hatches is flush-mounted.
A Harken traveler, which minds the self-tacking jib, is recessed
into the deck to further minimize obstructions. The anchor gear
(including a foldout bow roller) hides in a locker, and all the
halyards and sail controls run under the deck.
The simple cockpit arrangement allows easy passage from the open
transom past the twin carbon-fiber steering wheels and centrally
mounted carbon-fiber coffee-grinder pedestal to the companionway.
Each coaming boasts a pair of Lewmar 60 three-speed primary winches
and Lewmar 55 secondaries. All the sail controls exit on each side
of the companionway, where two Lewmar 50s and sheet stoppers
wait.
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The passageway to the after stateroom
leads through the fully equipped galley on the starboard
side.
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The starboard Lewmar 50 runs electrically, taking the effort out
of hoisting sails. The sheet leads are arranged so the electric
winch can trim the jib and main during family daysailing. The
mainsheet also exits near the primaries, so the coffee grinder can
be used to trim the main during races.
Southern Spars’ shop in Nevada provided the rig, which has no
running backstays to complicate shorthanded sailing. Triple
spreaders (swept back 20 degrees) provide above-average masthead
support for carrying spinnakers or code zero headsails, and a Harken
roller furler handles the jib. The storm trysail track, which is
aerodynamically faired into the starboard side of the mast, is long
enough to allow a slugged trysail to be bagged and stowed on deck,
ready to hoist.
Belowdecks, Kahn specified a forward master stateroom, an after
cabin for his children and a comfortable living area between. The
L-shape settee in the saloon has a double-hinged table, which
creates a spacious dining area in conjunction with the port settee.
A pilot berth outboard of each settee, complete with lee cloths for
rough weather, offers off-watch crew a secure, quiet resting
place.
Six opening hatches, plus port and starboard windows in the hull
and house, light and ventilate the accommodations, though part of
the airy feeling comes from the pale pecan paneling, which was cut
from one log and grain-matched by Goetz. The teak-and-holly sole is
foam cored, as are the Corian galley counters, to pare off
weight.
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All the navigation and communications
electronics exist in tidy harmony at the nav station. The
bucket seat provides security when the boat
heels.
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For the galley, Lake devised a sophisticated refrigeration
system, which uses gel walls encased in fiberglass to provide
exceptional cooling. The Broadwater LPG stove from Australia has two
burners plus the broiler and oven needed to make this a weekend
condo. Routing the brine tester for the Spectra watermaker to the
galley sink makes it easy to check the salinity.
Goetz laminated the hull with high-tech directional fabrics,
including an outer layer of woven cloth for long-term low
maintenance, over Nomex core. The anchor locker is watertight, as is
the sail locker between, giving double protection from collisions.
The after bulkhead is watertight under the cockpit.
Kahn asked that Pegasus 55 be quieter under power than his
Swan 48. Andrews and Lake made the engineroom airtight, then created
an intricate baffled ducting system to carry in fresh air while
reducing noise. The system, which opens into the cockpit, also has
watertight louvers that can be closed down when the yacht is
offshore. Soundown Corporation provided the 3-inch lead-and-foam
engineroom insulation, and the result is that you have to check the
tachometer to make sure the 51 hp Yanmar four-cylinder diesel (with
Saildrive) is running.
As we prepared to leave the dock at St. Francis Yacht Club in San
Francisco, Lake said the hardest thing we would do was take off the
mainsail cover, which proved true. Aboard were Lake, Zan Drejes (who
oversees Kahn’s fleet), pro sailor Dee Smith (taking a break from
his position as tactician, helmsman and co-navigator on Amer Sports
One in the Volvo Ocean Race) and myself. The touch of one finger
hoisted the main and spun open the jib, and, still with our hands in
our jackets, we were reaching across San Francisco Bay.
Time to tack. Spin the
wheel, the main snaps over, the jib rolls across, the instruments
show a minuscule dip in speed, and we’re off on the next tack. As
television chef Emeril Lagasse says, “Bam!”
As we sailed out under the Golden Gate Bridge, puffs rolled down
the hillsides, but they translated to only a brief heel and then
pure acceleration. The digital instruments painted 91/2 knots at 40
degrees in 12 to 13 knots of wind, making Pegasus 55 no
slouch in any league.
Spin the wheels to turn downwind, ease the sheets, and Pegasus
jumped forward even before the code zero was set, then the
acceleration was like going into second gear. The weekend after our
sail, Kahn and Drejes finished second boat for boat in the
Double-Handed Farallones race just four minutes behind a Wally 67. A
month later, Kahn finished first in the singlehanded Farallones race
in a 53-boat fleet—not bad for a boat just out of the box.
As a testament to the teamwork of Andrews, Lake and Goetz, the
yacht was built with what Lake guesses to be “around 3,000 e-mails
and 300 photographs” but, when Kahn saw his new boat, he made only
four minor changes, “and one was a cushion,” Lake said with a grin.
One thing Andrews says helped make Pegasus 55 so outstanding
was that Kahn had a phrase he would use whenever anyone faced a
decision: “Never compromise quality.”
Pegasus 55 sets a new benchmark that is likely to stand
for a long time.
Contact: Alan Andrews Yacht Design, (562) 594-9189; alan@andrewsyacht.com; http://www.andrewsyacht.com/.
Pegasus 55

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LOA: 55'0"
LWL: 49'1"
Beam: 14'5"
Draft: 10'0"
Displ.: 22,870 lb.
Ballast:
9,328 lb.
Aux. Power: 51 hp Yanmar 4JH3-CE
Saildrive
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