FT was a 35 foot long, 28 foot waterline by 26 foot beam. The sail area is 700 foot on a 47 foot mast. FT was sailed by David Palmer to 9th in 1974 OSTAR. The reason for the discussion is its crossbeams which were originally aluminium but were converted to fiberglass beams. The aluminium beams cracked at the intersect of the float. Kelsall had originally designed tube crossbeams but the required section was not available and Kelsall due to time pressures had to resort to aluminium U channels. When the problems arose Kelsall had the time to design and build a very effective set of fiberglass cross beams which solved the structural problems. The attached diagrams give a clear indication of the original and modified beams. A book called “The Atlantic Challenge The story of Trimaran FT” by David Palmer details the crossbeam story and other issues with the trimaran. The tri had a short waterline due to rules but used long floats to gain waterline length in strong winds so it had a pitching problem in light winds but it improved in stronger winds. As they developed the boat over time by strengthening rudders, reducing weight, improving the rig etc increased the performance of the boat but the real problem was the limitation of the OSTAR rules at that time which required the main hull shape to be distorted. The 2 basic learnings from the boat were don’t design to dumb rules and don’t compromise on major structural components. Design for the best available materials and wait for those materials, don’t compromise. The books cover is shown as it was first published in 1977, There are second hand versions of the book on the web.