Ed Horstman
Ed Horstman is an American naval architect and multihull sailboat designer.[1]
Other West Coast designers were strongly influenced by Piver, yet went divergent ways. Ed Horstman employed Boeing technology to create immense flush-deckers with accommodation in all three hulls—the dreadnaught class of trimarans.
— Randy Thomas[2]
Designs
- Tri-star 18
- Tri-star 24
- Tri-star 25
- Tri-star 26 MT
- Tri-star 27-9
- Tri-star 31
- Tri-star 31 CM
- Tri-star 32 XR
- Tri-star 35
- Tri-star 35 XR
- Tri-star 36
- Tri-star 37 XRC
- Tri-star 38 / 39
- Tri-star 40 LW
- Tri-star 42
- Tri-star 43 MC
- Tri-star 43 XRC
- Tri-star 44 LW
- Tri-star 45
- Tri-star 49
- Tri-star 50
- Tri-star 51 MC
- Tri-star 54
- Tri-star 60 / 63
- Tri-star 65
- Tri-star 80
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gollark: While in newer versions there's a bit of Lua code in the BIOS which provides more complex methods than `http.request`, the actual HTTP logic is still done in Java code.
gollark: Java.
gollark: HTTPS is easy enough to set up nowadays and all sane browsers support it.
gollark: My site does, since my webserver software does it automatically, since there aren't generally good reasons to use HTTP instead of HTTPS.
See also
References
- "Ed Horstman Multihull Designs". Retrieved 6 January 2015.
- Randy Thomas. "Multihulls Discovered: Part 1: Their origins, myths, magic, mana... and caveats that go along with these craft that have evolved from ancient heritage". Yachting. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
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