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Measuring diagram for Contender class vessel
Measuring diagram for Contender class vessel

Measuring diagram for Contender class vessel

Designer (1936 - 1988)
Date1967
Object numberANMS1543[094]
NamePlan
Mediumink on drafting film
Dimensions580 x 775
Copyright© Ben Lexcen
ClassificationsMaps, charts and plans
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection purchased with USA Bicentennial Gift funds
DescriptionThe Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) 16-foot CONTENDER dinghy ‘measuring diagram’ drawn in 1969 showing all the parts, sizes, weights and location, to build the boat to class rules.HistoryThe measuring diagram for the 16-foot CONTENDER racing dinghy is an exceptionally well-drawn work providing a three-dimensional view of all the parts, sizes, locations and details to build the boat to class rules. It shows the layout of the hull, inside and out, the mast, boom, sail, fittings and weights as well as the location of logo and sail number on the sail. Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) and his team at ‘Miller & Whitworth’ clearly spent a good deal of time and effort to prepare this and other drawings which could be easily understood and used by owners with limited boatbuilding skills. Despite designing seven Australian 12mR America Cup challenge yachts and many fast and successful offshore racing yachts, Ben Lexcen (formally Bob Miller) maintained a passion for small fast sailing boats all his life. The 16-foot CONTENDER racing dinghy is one of his finest small boats designs. Ever the innovator, he started the design project due to the International Yacht Racing Union (IYRU) deciding to look for a boat to replace the Olympic Finn dinghy in 1964. They wanted a single-handed performance boat which would be lighter than the 1949 designed Finn dinghy (FD). They placed an emphasis on, seamanship, skill, and agility to sail them, rather than that demanded by the earlier boat. This construction drawing, along with the others, will have been prepared to sell the design package to a wide variety of potential clients. The self-taught naval architect and yacht designer Ben Lexcen was born Robert Clyde Miller, on March 19th. 1936 at Boggabri, in New South Wales, Australia. As a boy he sailed extensively on Lake Macquarie, often spending nights camped alone in his first small boat. In 1952, at the age of 16, he designed and built his first sailing boat ‘THE COMET’ with his friend William Bennett, and soon began to make a name for himself at local sailing competitions. In 1960 he entered his boat TAIPAN in the 18-Footer World Championships, and later winning the World Championship in 1961 with his design, the 18-foot skiff VENOM. A year later in 1962, together with his friend Craig Whitworth, he founded a sail-making company in Sydney called ‘Miller and Whitworth’ while still designing boats. One of these boat designs became the much-regarded 16-foot international CONTENDER which he started in 1966. In 1967 it was selected as a potential Olympic successor to the Finn dinghy and in 1968 awarded international status. The first boat he designed for this project in 1966 and nicknamed MILLERS MISSILE, was a radical boat with hard chine hull, very flat underwater sections, a fully battened main-sail and a trapeze for the single crew to balance their weight against the wind on the sail. But it did not perform well, so Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) redesigned the hull based on the 20-foot Flying Dutchman (FD) dinghy which he was sailing at the time. Originally named DOROTHY after his wife, Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) needed funding to launch the project and found a sailcloth manufacturer with a new product called CONTENDER. The boat was renamed and sent to the second trials at La Baule in France, but the winds were light, none of the boats performed well, so no decision was made. The third set of trials were at Medemblik in Holland, by which time Bob Miller had redesigned the boat with more sail and higher freeboard. With strong winds during the trials, Bob Miller sailed SKIPPY his new CONTENDER and proved he had the best boat. It resulted in the IYRU declaring that they had their new ‘singlehander’. It was not however given Olympic status, but still enjoyed success around the world as an International Class boat. From its home base in Sydney, Australia, the CONTENDER was originally built in timber, using lightweight marine plywood for most of the parts. Some of the boats were made as ’kit boats’ which allowed owners to plan and build the boat themselves. This hull construction plan may well have been from that period. Then in 1970, due to increasing demand locally and from the US, Canada, and across Europe, they were built in GRP (Glass Reinforced Plastic) as a series production. The first World Championships of the International CONTENDER took place at Hayling Island, UK during 1970 and continues at various venues today. The boat is also still built today, under licence in glass fibre, wood, or a composite construction using wood and epoxy glue. They are all built to strict guidelines, to conform to the class rules, overseen by the International Contender Association. Bob Miller left the ‘Miller & Whitworth’ partnership with Craig Whitworth in 1974 and moved to England where he started design work on the 12mR ‘AUSTRALIA. Despite the CONTENDER being an international success it is unlikely he made any money from the design after he left the partnership. He was unable to receive his mail sent to ‘Miller & Whitworth’ and frustrated the company were still using his name he changed it to Ben Lexcen in 1977. The International CONTENDER proved to be an outstanding design, and still the only high-performance single-handed dinghy that offers international racing in competitive fleets. More than 2,400 boats have been built and are sailed in seventeen countries around the world. An accomplished international sailor, Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) represented Australia in the Soling class at the 1972 at the Olympic Games at Munich, West Germany. He sailed successfully in many offshore races after that but maintained a love of fast, sailing dinghies all his life. Ben Lexcen passed away at Balgowlah, Sydney on May 1st, 1988, but the night before he returned to his love of the 18-skiff by attended the launching of Grand Prix Sailing at the Entertainment Centre.SignificanceThis ‘measuring diagram’ provides a vast amount of accurate information needed to build the 16-foot CONTENDER racing dinghy designed by Bob Miller (later Ben Lexcen) in 1967. Together with other construction plans, it was used by boat builders in Australia and around the world to build the boat and conform to the CONTENDER Class rules. Selected by the International Yacht Racing Union (IYRU) as a possible replacement for the Finn dinghy the ‘CONTENDER was awarded international status in 1968. Almost sixty-years after being designed it is still produced and the only high-performance single-handed dinghy that offers international racing in competitive fleets.