Surefire sail boat

Surefire sail boat Surefire is an Oyster SJ35 racer-cruiser made in 1987 or 88. She has a racing history, and participated twice in the China Sea Race from Hong Kong to Manila. Mr.

She is based at the Manila Yacht Club. Brief history of Surefire (January 2021)

Surefire is an Oyster SJ35 racer-cruiser built by Oyster Yachts of Suffolk, UK around 1982. “SJ” is the initials of the designer, Stephen Jones, and “35” is the approximate length, in feet, of the boat. The SJ35 was built to the International Offshore Racing (IOR) rules in effect at the time, in a class called “3/4 to

n”. She is very lightweight (around 3.5 tons dry) for her size, but a bit wide compared to modern boats. The SJ35 is designed to have a racing crew of 10, and it is possible to install 10 berths, although only six are currently installed. It is possible to sail her with a minimum of three, one at the helm, one tending the mainsail, and one tending the foresail. In 1983, the Oyster SJ35 achieved five firsts at Cowes Week, won eight EAORA races and her class in five RORC races, including the Fastnet Race, and an overall win in the Channel Race. SJ35 Imperator was RORC Yacht of the Year in 1988 and won her class in the 2001 Fastnet. 27 SJ35s were launched between 1981 and 1985, including Surefire. Sure Fire (her original name was two words) was purchased new from the UK by Bart Kimman, a Dutch national based in Hong Kong. He raced her in the 1988 China Sea Race from Hong Kong to Manila, placing 12th out of 44 boats. He raced her again in the 1992 race, placing 42nd out of 62 boats in class. Kimman sold her that year in Manila, for US$28,000 (US$59,286 in 2020 dollars, or around PhP3M in 2020 pesos) to a Filipino syndicate led by the late Toots Echauz, Commodore of the Manila Yacht Club. The sale was brokered by the founding Commodore of the Subic Bay Yacht Club, Ambassador José Zaldarriaga. Sure Fire was sold by the syndicate to construction magnate Isidro Consunji in the late 1990’s. He went sailing on it only once, didn’t like it, and parked it for about a decade in Puerto Galera, Oriental Mindoro, where it was under the care of Caloy García, a founder of the Puerto Galera Yacht Club and an engineer employed at the time by his firm, DM Consunji. Consunji gave Sure Fire to his son, Victor, around 2009. Victor sailed the boat several times, but when he got married to Maggie Wilson in 2010, gave her back to his father, who then sold it to Apa Ongpin, in 2011, for PhP300,000 (around US$7,000). Ongpin partnered with Jèrome Philippon, and they restored the boat, changing her name to one word, ‘Surefire’. Surefire sails once or twice a month, racing in the Manila Yacht Club series. She has been to Corregidor and Subic.

21/10/2022
Surefire ready to sail this morning.
22/05/2021

Surefire ready to sail this morning.

Morning at the Folk Arts Theater quay, before the habagat wind picks up.

16/05/2021

We were all ready for a violent swipe of the boom across the boat, and braced ourselves... for nothing. That's sail racing! With Kim and Glen Carberry.

Sunday race, 22 March 2021. Photos taken at the finish by Marjoe Laud, Race Officer.
21/03/2021

Sunday race, 22 March 2021. Photos taken at the finish by Marjoe Laud, Race Officer.

03/03/2021

Surefire dry sail (no drinks except water!)

25/02/2021

Fun day on the water with Noel Bonoan!

07/02/2021

Thanks for the great photos and video, Damen Trigo!

11 things I learned from yesterday's Corregidor adventure:1. I need a haircut. Photos: Quintin Jose Pastrana2. Surefire ...
02/02/2021

11 things I learned from yesterday's Corregidor adventure:
1. I need a haircut. Photos: Quintin Jose Pastrana
2. Surefire handles terrifically under full sail in 20 knot winds, like we had from Manila to Corregidor. We made 6 knots average. She needs a lot of attention at the tiller, though, because she's so light: unlike a heavy cruising boat with a full keel, waves tend to slap her around, so you need a lot of effort to keep her on course. That's the price of speed.
3. There is a hidden coral reef in the Northern approach, between the "tail" of Corregidor and Caballo Island. We hit it, and ran aground. It was a moment of panic, but we got off, and no major damage. The correct approach is to stay much closer to Caballo Island. I wish they would put a marker buoy. The first time we went, I actually passed in the gap between the last rock of the tail and the one before it, and didn't hit anything.
4. We need to carry a lot more spare impellers. When the boat is heeling hard to port, it is possible for the engine raw water intake to suck up air and lose priming. We blew the impeller on the raw water pump, and then the spare. I think we need to relocate that water intake, as well.
5. Because we still needed the engine to maneuver, B**g and I rigged up the tiny little bilge pump (it's half the size of a soda can) to suck sea water out of a pail fed by the raw water intake, and feed it to the motor. Incredibly, it worked.
6. On the way back, the wind was so strong (20 knots gusting 30), we had to shorten the main to the second reef, because the boat was getting dragged sideways. We did manage to keep the genoa on, instead of the small no. 3.
7. Despite speeds in water of 6 to 7 knots (we were heeled over 45° and throwing quite a wake), the tide was directly against us, so our actual progress over ground was 2-3 knots at best.
8. We were forced to take a longer route, East to the coast of Cavite, then hugging the coast, where the current wasn't as bad, maybe because of laminar flow. This improved our speed over ground to 3-4 knots, and then, as the tide started to ebb, to 5 knots. It still took us over 7 hours to get home.
9. I need to put cushions in the cockpit for long trips, my butt hurts. I stood for a lot of it, so my back also hurts. The wind was really cold as well, so my neck hurts. My sunburn hurts, but that's my fault.
10. I wrestled with that tiller for about 11 hours, so don't tell me sailing isn't exercise. It's like swinging a 10 lb. kettle bell, just try that for 11 hours.
11. Surefire is a great boat, especially considering the design was launched 40 years ago this year, in the middle of the flawed IOR era. I raise my glass to the designer, Mr. Stephen Jones. You, sir, are a genius.

02/02/2021

This trip was a real adventure

09/12/2020

Not much wind, but enough good whisky!

Surefire is now officially in the Philippine Registry! It's been a long and tough journey, lobbying since 2016, drafting...
20/10/2020

Surefire is now officially in the Philippine Registry! It's been a long and tough journey, lobbying since 2016, drafting the proposed regulations, then tough negotiations with the MARINA, but we finally did it! From now on, Surefire will proudly fly the flag of the Philippines from her stern... and carry her Official Number at the bow— we will find some way to do this that does not spoil her lines.

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Manila Yacht Club, Roxas Boulevard
Manila

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