AntonLargiader wrote:
I wonder if they made the hulls a bit thicker for recreational use. Sounds like a great boat: F18 hydrodynamics, wings, dual self-furlers, and reef points. Does any manufacturer offer a boat like this in the US?
If the idea was to get more use out of the molds for the outdated Tiger design, I'm sure the hulls are identical. From what Matt said, it sounds like they probably used as many of the same parts as they could - mast, boom, crossbars, trampoline, probably similar sail plan and self tacking jib, so parts are bound to be pricey. The wings are a great addition, and the furling gennaker and re-designed daggerboards definitely reduce the workload on the crew a little and make it more of a "day sailor," but otherwise it sounds like it isn't much different from a Tiger. I love the better hull design & wings, and the gennaker, self tacking jib and high aspect ratio sails would be great improvements over the H18, but I wonder how the furling gennaker and low AR daggers affect the performance.
Overall, it'd be a fantastic boat to upgrade to from an H18... more modern, but it has a lot of the features 18 sailors love, including the wings, better displacement and hull form, and without compromising too much performance features, for those who really like to tune their rig. I was going to look at the Portsmouth yardstick numbers for Pearl vs. Tiger vs. Hobie 18, but apparently US Sailing requires a paid subscription to get access to the PN tables now

. I expect it probably can out-point an H18 with high AR sails, even with less efficient daggers, and surely can outrun one downwind. For the right price, I'd pick one up in a heartbeat, if only they were sold in the US!
(I don't know of any manufacturer producing a boat quite like the Pearl in the US)