I was doing a little snooping around concerning French built Tritons and came across this photo.
Now this is a forward port!
Anyone have some information to share concerning these boats?
If you speak French there is a whole review of the boats beginning at
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/deber/page51.htm. Even if you don't read French there are several pages of pictures that are worth a look.
I was using an online translator but it kept choking on the nautical words.
-Britton
French built Tritons
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- Bottom Sanding Grunt
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:42 am
- Boat Name: Viya
- Boat Type: Jouet Triton
- Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Re: French built Tritons
Hi all,
Meet the beauty. Photos were taken last year before the restoration works started. Obviously the previous owner also didn't like the idea of having a big port beating into a seaway, so he glassed it. The contour lines are still visible from inside the front cabin.
Meet the beauty. Photos were taken last year before the restoration works started. Obviously the previous owner also didn't like the idea of having a big port beating into a seaway, so he glassed it. The contour lines are still visible from inside the front cabin.
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- Bottom Sanding Grunt
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:42 am
- Boat Name: Viya
- Boat Type: Jouet Triton
- Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Re: French built Tritons
Well, I said beauty, but there's also a saying that goes like a crow sees his/her chick as a phoenix.
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- Skilled Systems Installer
- Posts: 165
- Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2007 9:54 pm
- Boat Name: Mahana
- Location: Bristol, Maine
Re: French built Tritons
Welcome, avninal,
It looks like a fun project. Those French-built boats really do look different (sort of a cross between a West Coast Triton, with the fiberglass molded coaming boards, and a Peugeot). I'm curious about the lack of sheet winches on your coamings. Is that just temporary, or are those winches mounted on the cabin meant to sheet in the jib?
It looks like a fun project. Those French-built boats really do look different (sort of a cross between a West Coast Triton, with the fiberglass molded coaming boards, and a Peugeot). I'm curious about the lack of sheet winches on your coamings. Is that just temporary, or are those winches mounted on the cabin meant to sheet in the jib?
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- Bottom Sanding Grunt
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:42 am
- Boat Name: Viya
- Boat Type: Jouet Triton
- Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Re: French built Tritons
Thank you very much Hulukupu, it sure is and has been a very fun project on a very neglected boat. The more I delve into it the more I wonder who with a sane mind would undertake this kind of a task.Hulukupu wrote:Welcome, avninal,
It looks like a fun project. Those French-built boats really do look different (sort of a cross between a West Coast Triton, with the fiberglass molded coaming boards, and a Peugeot). I'm curious about the lack of sheet winches on your coamings. Is that just temporary, or are those winches mounted on the cabin meant to sheet in the jib?
At the time of the purchase there was a newly but stuck engine, a roller furling, a depth sounder, a speed & distance log and a pair of Goiot winches that you mentioned.
And your your question is spot on. After half a year of occasional but vigourous cleaning, and another half a year of trying to make her seaworthy again, last month we've made sea trials for the engine twice and once for the jib with the existant winches for the first time. Obviously the jib lines got jammed.
Now I can't decide whether to mount new winches on the coamings or try to solve this by adding blocks to either side of the deck near the relevant stanchion bases (approximately aligning with a point that falls between the portlights) thus bringing the jib lines down to the deck from outside the shrouds and up again to the existing winches. And maybe glueing a piece of protective stainless steel pad with a L shaped cross section for the points where the lines will make contact with the cabin top next to the winches as well.
http://marinestore.co.uk/YWTYPEB.html
http://marinestore.co.uk/PBPS-1910.html
Your ideas are very much appreciated and thanking you in advance.