BUCHAN BOATS
From a conversation with Bill Buchan
The
Buchan family business in Scotland was tied to boats and fishing. In the early 1920s
they immigrated to the Pacific Northwest where they felt that they could continue their
trade. Bill's father, while owning and operating a retail fish market in downtown Seattle,
built a variety of sailboats boats for himself in his spare time during the late
1930s and into the 1940s. Thus, when Bill saw the Stars gather in Seattle for
the North American Championship in 1948 and decided, at the age of 13, that he wanted one
of those boats it was natural for his father to suggest that they should build one
themselves. A major factor in the decision was that at the N.A.'s there were other sailors
who were not all that much older than Bill was. Lowell North and Bill Ficker for instance,
who were both in their teens, were there and instantly became his heroes.
It
happened at this time near Bill's house in the Seattle neighborhood of Madison Park that
there was a garage full of Stars, some 20 in all. It was the winter storage place for the
Puget Sound Star Fleet. While he and his father got the plans to build a Star from the
Class, they found it easier to go to the garage and measure the Stars that were there as
well as to pick up on ideas for the construction of the boat. Somehow, the resulting boat
was able to measure in as a legal Star. The boat was named "Torrid", # 2830,
which was completed and registered in 1949.
The
Buchans, father as crew and son, now 14, as skipper, started to race with the Puget Sound
Fleet. The fleet was fairly active, with 20 or more boats turning out for the important
races such as the Fleet Championship or what was then called the Pacific International
Yachting Association Regatta where the Puget Sound Fleet would mix it up with the
Canadians from the Vancouver area.
After
a couple of years of sailing "Torrid" Bill became more acquainted with the finer
points of boat construction in terms of taking advantage of the various tolerances which
were allowed in hull construction and design. The Class was abuzz with what Skip Etchells
was doing with his O.G.'s (from Old Greenwich Boat Co.). As a point of interest, Skip and
his friend Bill Kelley actually built the first Etchells Star in the same Madison Park
garage while they were employed in the Seattle shipbuilding industry during the war. Bill
and his father then set about building a new boat which took advantage of some of these
builders tolerances. The resulting boat was "Bydand". # 3213, built
and registered in 1952. Bill went to Newport Harbor for the Christmas Regatta that winter
to crew with another Seattle Star sailor where he saw George Fleitz, who was amazingly
fast in his O.G. Wench IV, Star # 2951. Fleitz had synthetic sails made by Kenny Watts
which Bill had no idea even existed. Bill wanted to order a suit of these sails, but Watts
didn't want to sell sails to someone who might make his sails look bad.
That
summer, John Cram and his brother Wally showed up in Seattle with O.G. # 3298,
"Scram", and showed awesome speed in their O.G. as well, interestingly enough
with cotton sails, also made by Watts. It was obvious to Bill that it was the O.G. boat
and not necessarily the synthetic sails that were responsible for generating such
performance. After looking at Crams boat Bill came to realize that there was more
wiggle room in the hull tolerances than he thought possible. This was accomplished by
utilizing what the Class called the moving baseline. By doing so, a boat could
be flatter by 2 from the original plans instead of the 1 that he thought was
the maximum and still measure in. That was enough to prompt Bill to build yet another
boat, #3382, the first Frolic, in
that same summer of 1953.
One of
the other hallmarks of the O.G.'s, which wasnt discovered until a couple of years
later, was the wide bow. Skip had opened up the half beam measurement at station 1, a
measurement that at that time wasnt recorded on the certificate, making the stem
more plumb which had the effect of increasing the sailing length of the Star. Realizing
that, Bill performed major surgery on the Frolic the winter of 1956.
With
the building of "Frolic" Bill became a builder of record in the Star Class Log,
and Buchan Boats under the symbol BUC was listed in the 1954 Log.
Unfortunately,
"Frolic" did not receive her measurement certificate by the time the North
American Silver Star series of 1953 took place, and he and his father had to take
"Bydand" to Milwaukee. They finished in the lower third of the fleet.

Frolic, # 4260, leaving Bills shop for the first time in the Spring of 1960.
Since
Bill couldn't get Watts to sell him sails he had a local sailmaker build him a suit from
Dacron in 1954. He and his father participated in the 1954 N.A.'s, this time held at
Rockport, MA. With the new boat and sails they were now whistling another tune and
finished 15th out of 37. About this time Murphy and Nye began to make synthetic sails out
of a fabric called Orlon, which were very successful so Bill began to buy sails from them
in 1955.
After
a few years of sailing the "Frolic" #3382 successfully in the 6th District and
doing somewhat better at the 1958 and 1959 World's (9th and 10th) Bill decided to build a
new "Frolic", #4260, during the winter of 1959/1960 in the garage of his new
home on Mercer Island. With this "Frolic" Bill won the 1961 World's with Doug
Knight crewing. The next year they went to the Worlds at Cascais where they finished
4th. (Star #4260 stayed in Portugal and is presently being refinished by its owner Mario
Guedes de Sampaio.)

Bill Buchan and Doug Knight
on their way to winning the 1961 Worlds
at San Diego
In
1963 Bill built Star #4660, also named "Frolic". The main characteristic of
#4660 was that it was narrow at the chine and wide at the sheer with minimum freeboard, as
compared to 4260, which was a very narrow shape. Bill felt that this design might have
better speed in strong wind conditions. With this boat Bill was 5th at the 1963 World's at
Chicago. This was also the boat that he sailed at the 1964 Olympic Trials, held in Chicago
too. Although the boat certainly performed well in the breezy races, Chicago, as we now
know, isnt really the Windy City that Bill thought it was.
Not
being satisfied with that boat, he then built Star #4913 in the fall of 1964 and finished
3rd at the 1965 World's at Newport Harbor. This was followed by Star #5260, built in 1968,
which was raced in the 1968 Olympic Trials in San Diego.

Bill Buchan (left) and Doug Knight
after winning the 1961 Worlds
In
1968, because of a housing slowdown in the Seattle area, Bill's construction business
tapered off. That, and the advent of fiberglass made it apparent that Bill might want to
build Stars for a living. Fiberglass boats had become allowed by the Class by this time. A
plug was built in Bills shop based on the lines of 4260, which seemed to him as the
most well- rounded of all the boats he had built in the interim. The work of building the
molds as well as the hulls themselves was done by the Clark Boat Co. in Kent, Washington.
Bill brought the unfinished hulls back to his garage/workshop and finished them off there,
working mostly on nights and weekends.
At
first a very low-density foam core was used but that proved to be unsatisfactory. These
boats started with #5333, which Bill sailed in the 1978 Worlds. He remembers Lowell North,
Pete Bennett and Barton Beek also sailed his boats at that regatta. By the next year he
switched to balsa core in the high load areas of the boats.
Bill
won the World's at Marstrand with #5460 which was built utilizing the new lay up.
One of
the early problems, which Bill encountered with the fiberglass boats was that there was a
surprising amount of shrinkage. The molds had to exceed maximum length by a slight amount,
for example, in order for the boats to measure in properly. New molds were built in 1971
for the 5600 series boats, many of which were delivered to their owners at the Seattle
Worlds Championship that summer. In 1973 Bill built a second boat for Lowell North,
Star #5662. This boat won the 1973 World's for Lowell and then won the 1974 World's with
Tom Blackaller at the helm.

Star # 5445, Magic, built for Bob Rodgers of the Green Lake fleet. Trailer built by Spar Tech. Note the position of the traveler, half way between the rudderpost and the transom. The starboard bilge pump is just visible in the cockpit.
The
5600 series molds were sent to Ron Anderson and Larry Whipple after the 1974 Worlds
so that the boats could be built someplace else since Bills construction business
was now taking all of his spare time. Sometime later the molds were brought back to
Seattle and were eventually sold to a group of people in Brazil.
With
his son Carls good friend Chris Mass doing most of the work, Bill then built a split
mold in the hope that the boats would be easier to assemble, by someone other than himself
hopefully.
One
interesting phenomenon is that boats built in a split mold cure to be a flatter shape
athwartships and boats built in a one piece mold wind up being of a rounder shape. The
flatter boats out of this mold were not especially good in light air whereas the rounder
ones, for example those molded by Miller, out of a still later mold proved to be good
light air boats.
At
about this time both Howard Lippincott and Bill Gerard asked Bill if they could use 5600
series boats, which they had at their disposal, to build molds for their own use. In both
cases Bill said it would be fine and as a result, several boats were built by both of
their companies over the next several years, one of them being the boats with which Buddy
Melges won the 1978 and 1979 Worlds. Mader was also interested in utilizing the
Buchan design so Bill sent over to them a hull from which they built a mold. Mader,
working with the MacCauslands, have continued to use basically the same Buchan hull shape
to this day.

BILL & CARL BUCHAN
at the 1976 Bacardis in # 5647

BILL BUCHAN & DOUG KNIGHT
winning the 1979 Bacardi Cup in # 6042