2008 Alerion 38' Express 38

Bliss

 

2008 Alerion

38' (11.58m) Express 38 - Bliss

Bliss is a stunning example of the Alerion Express 38. She is a two owner boat.  Both owners have maintained and upgraded this boat with an open checkbook since leaving the factory in 2008.  She is stored indoors in the winter and has been maintained by Hinckley Yacht Services.

Flag of Registry: United States


Vessel ID# 2813799      Last Updated: 2024-05-05 13:57:07

$ 249,000 USD

€ 233,911 Euros
$ 342,717 CAD
£ 200,304 GBP

Description

Located in Southwest Harbor, Maine Bliss is a stunning example of the Alerion Express 38. She is a two owner boat. Both owners have maintained and upgraded this boat with an open checkbook since leaving the factory in 2008. She is stored indoors in the winter and has been maintained by Hinckley Yacht Services.

She was equipped with North 3Di Endurance mainsail and jib in 2020, Raymarine i70 instruments / auto pilot, and Garmin chartplotter in 2018. 

Bliss is a dream to sail. She is equipped with a self tacking Hoyt jib boom, and has all lines lead back to electric winches in front of the teak wheel. The helmsman can easily single-hand this boat through all points of sail; while eight guests relax in the cockpit outfitted with comfortable custom cushions.

Data Sheet

LOA: 38' " (11.58 Meters)

Type: Sail - Used

Year: 2008

Beam: 10' 8"

Draft Max: 5' 11"

Cabins: 1

Heads: 1

Fuel Type: Diesel

Hull Material: Fiberglass

Dry Weight: 13000

Ballast Weight: 6000 lbs

Designer: Carl Schumacher & Pearson Design Group

Photos   click to view all

Full Details

Accommodations

The main cabin is finished with varnished teak trim over flat white panels, providing a warm and inviting interior below deck. Ample light permeates through six fixed ports and three opening hatches, illuminating the varnished teak and holly cabin sole.

Moving forward is the stateroom with a sizable 6'6" V-berth and plush cushions. Above the port settee are the electrical distribution panels and to aft is a hanging locker. Behind and below the seat backs are cubbies with a considerable amount of storage space. Above the settees you'll find shelves with fiddles and lockers.

Aft and to port is the enclosed marine head, plumbed w/Y-valve and holding tank. The vanity has ample storage with sliding mirrors and polished stainless steel sink w/hot and cold water. The sink has extendable faucet to allow for showering.

Aft and to starboard is the galley with white countertops, large refrigerated ice box and ample storage.

  • 12000 BTU air conditioning



Galley

  • 12v Seafrost refrigeration
  •  Force Ten 2 burner propane stove with broiler/ oven and off/on solenoid control
  •  Stainless steel sink



Cockpit

  • With high seatbacks and deep, slightly angled seats, cockpit and helm-station comfort are excellent. Several deep cockpit lockers provide excellent on-deck stowage for lines and fenders.
  • Custom blue w/ white trim cockpit cushions
  • Custom blue helm cover and sail cover/Sail pack 
  • Custom forward facing teak seats aft of the helm w/ covers
  • Removable cockpit table
  • Dark blue dodger and bimini
  • Swim ladder.



Sails and Rigging

Bliss comes with a fractional (double spreader) carbon fiber mast from Hall Spars, and an aluminum boom. She is also equipped with the quintessential self-tending Hoyt jib boom.

The Alerion 38 is known for its excellent light wind and off-wind performance, and is easily sailed single or double handed. There are two sets of sails.

  • Square Topped North 3Di Endurance main with full battens 2020
  • North 3Di Endurance jib 2020
  •  Dacron main and jib
  • Harken mainsheet traveler
  • Single line reefing system led to primaries
  • Harken roller furler
  • Hall Rigid Quick Vang
  • Navtech continuous rod rigging
  • 2 Lewmar #46 electric 2 speed self-tailing primaries
  • Adjustable Harken genoa tracks
  • Lazy Jacks



Sail area and Test Sails

Working Sail Area : 810.00 sq ft

Sail Area-Displacement ratio – 23.5

Under Sail by Bill Springer

The boat is designed to excel in light air, and my test sail proved it was up to the task.

  • Upwind speeds were 5 to 6 knots in barely 8 knots of wind. We tacked through 75 degrees.
  • The helm was perfectly balanced with just the right amount of weather helm.
  • The boat tracked beautifully. No problem taking my hands off the wheel for minutes at a time.
  • The Hoyt Jib Boom with non overlapping headsail reduced tacking to simply turning the wheel.
  • Off the wind, the jib boom helped keep the jib filled even when sailing by the lee, dead-downwind. With sails wing and wing boat speed was 2 to 3 knots.
  • Excellent light-air performance comes from the boat’s mainsail; it’s oversized, laminated, full-batten, heavily roached, and can be reefed easily. A tall (56-foot) painted carbon rig puts considerable sail area up where there is usually more breeze, and eliminating the backstay allows the large roach to tack around unencumbered.
  • Both the main- and jib sheets run to powered winches on pods directly adjacent to the helm station. This allows for true single handed operation.

  • The boat is a joy to sail in light breezes. The cockpit layout is conducive to easy day sails, and the accommodations strike a good balance between minimal and comfortable.



Electronics

All electronics are installed in a customized NavPod GP1031 in front of the helm. The Garmin radar/plotter, Raymarine i70 sailing instruments and autopilot are all conveniently controlled and viewable behind the beautifully varnished teak wheel.

  • 2018 Garmin Chart-plotter
  • 2018 Raymarine i70 Instrument Display - AutoPilot, Wind/Speed/Depth
  • NavPod GP1031
  • ICOM VHF (black)
  • Fusion stereo system
  • Infiniti 6.5” marine speaker (white)
  • Ritchie 5" compass
  • New Garmin 18 HD+ radar still in box never installed 2022
  • New Scanstrut LMP-1 self leveling radar pole never installed 2022



Electrical

Wired for 12 Volt DC and limited 110 volt AC service

12 VDC System:

● Switch panel with breakers

● 2 Lifeline AGM GPL 4DA batteries

● Lifeline AGM GPL 31XT engine start battery

● 60 amp alternator

● Xantrex battery monitor

110 Volt AC:

  •  Switch panel with breakers
  • AC outlets
  • Water heater (also engine supplied)
  • Xantrex True Charge 2 TX4012 40 amp battery charger
  • Promariner Prosafe FS30 galvanic isolator
  • Charles Marine isolation power transformer 3.6 KVAISO-G2
  • Xantrex Pro XM1800 inverter
  • 50' 30 amp shore power cord
  • 30 amp shore power inlet in cockpit



Hull and Deck

Bliss’s finish is a magnificent flag blue Awlgrip, with a white boot top and a gold cove stripe. The exterior laminate is laid up in blister resistant monourethane, creating a flawless finish that is easy to maintain. The bottom is perfectly finished with multi-season red antifouling paint. The cored fiberglass hull was constructed using the patented SCRIMP process, which provides optimal strength and mitigates any potential moisture intrusion.

The deck is finished with a two-tone tan non-skid on white. The cockpit is encompassed with varnished teak toe rails, coamings, and grab rails, providing an elegant touch to this traditional yacht. The deck hardware is all original polished stainless steel, and in excellent condition.

Sail lockers are accessible on the port and starboard side, and a large lazarette is accessed at the aft deck, which houses the autopilot components and steering cables, all kept in near perfect condition. Walking towards the bow you will find double stainless steel stanchions and lifelines with gates on starboard and port side.

  • Lofrans 500 12v windlass new motor 2022
  • Plow anchor
  • 150' all chain anchor rode
  • New exterior varnish December 2022
  • New bottom paint July 2022



Engine and Mechanical

  • Yanmar 40 hp diesel with 596 hours, turns a two blade folding prop on a SD50 sail drive
  • Dual Racor fuel filters with change over valve and pressure gauge
  • Edson engine controls
  • Electric bilge pump
  • Manual bilge pump
  • Manual overboard pump for holding tank
  • Sail drive serviced 2023 new lower end seals
  • Coolant flushed and refilled 2022
  • 16 liters hot water heater Quik Nautic BX1612S
  • Raritan 12v electric head



Additional Items in Storage

  • 12v Electric oil change pump with bucket and hoses
  • 12v Electric coolant flush circulating pump with bucket and hoses
  • Winterizing bucket
  • SS swim ladder
  • 6 fan pads
  • Lifesling
  • Assorted paints
  • Assorted cleaners and waxes
  • Assorted box of messenger lines and dock lines
  • 4 lifeline cushions for hiking out


Additional Items

  • Tools
  • Bosun chair
  • Horseshoe life ring with holder
  • Flag pole and American flag



Performance Information from Soundings

The Garry Hoyt design proved quick and agile on a daysail off Portsmouth, R.I.

One part eagle, three parts sailor’s best friend, the Alerion Express 38 is the offspring of a collaboration between the late designer Carl Schumacher and the ever-adventurous designer/marketeer Garry Hoyt.

The AE 38 combines the traditional good looks of her smaller sister, the Alerion Express 28, with a 21st-century rig and electric sail-handling gear. Although the AE 38 is reminiscent of Nathanael Herreshoff’s original 26-foot Alerion and its progeny, she has a shallow underbody, fin keel of relatively high aspect ratio, and elliptical spade rudder. She’s fast, agile and easy to sail, alone or with a crew of skipper and mate.

When Hoyt and I sailed hull No. 1 on a spanking clean fall day, the wind blew 11 to 17 knots, primarily out of the southwest. But the narrow roadstead between Prudence and Aquidneck islands off Portsmouth, R.I., tortured the flow and sent it careening in a variety of directions. With an Indian summer temperature in the low 70s, who could ask for better conditions?

The AE 38 began to win me over from the very first maneuver, under the thrust of her 40-hp Yanmar Saildrive auxiliary diesel. As Hoyt backed out of the slip, the 38 kept a straight course until he engaged forward, opened the throttle, and spun the boat as though it were a top. The Yanmar, combined with the bite of its folding prop, gives the AE 38 a top speed of 7 knots under power — more than fast enough to get home in time for dinner when the wind dies. Before we exited the marina, Hoyt performed a couple of doughnut turns to prove that the boat needs only her own length for this trick — great for avoiding trouble in crowded mooring fields.

After we cleared the marina at New England Boatworks, we headed into the wind and hoisted the main from its nest in the lazyjacks. A few wraps on the electric winch and a push of a button are all that’s needed to get started. During the hoist you have to make sure the boat stays dead to windward to prevent the full-length battens from hanging up on the lazyjacks. The rig combines a large elliptical mainsail (single deep reef) set on a Hall Spars carbon-fiber mast with a small roller-furling jib. The patented Hoyt Jib Boom, which sprouts from the foredeck and curves aft to a traveler, makes the jib self-tending. The boom also acts as a vang, keeping the jib from twisting off to leeward near the top. Equally beneficial is that it becomes a whisker pole when the boat’s sailing downwind. No spinnaker needed, thank you. Vertical battens in the jib stiffen the leech, which keeps it from fluttering.

We shut down the auxiliary and bore off on a beam reach. Under mainsail alone and in true wind speeds of 9 and 12 knots, the AE 38 reached speeds of 4.6 and 5.1 knots. The helm remained well-balanced, and the boat tacked and jibed like a big dinghy. This excellent performance under just the main is the result of breaking out of the triangular prison established by rating rules early in the 20th century.

Handicapping rules at the time penalized the mainsail area. To beat the rule and get back the area lost in the main, designers relied on the unrated headsail — the genoa jib. Hoisted to the masthead, these huge sails enjoyed a clean luff (no mast to break up the air flowing over the leading edge of the sail) and provided the majority of drive from a broad reach to close-hauled. For the sail to work as designed, the forestay had to be bar-taut, and only an equally tight backstay could provide this tension. Imagine a crossbow cocked and ready to fire. These two stays determined the shape of the mainsail — and the headsail.

The AE 38 doesn’t have a backstay, because the small jib doesn’t require much tension on the forestay. Getting rid of the backstay lets the designer specify an elliptical mainsail, flat or rounded at the top and nicely convex at the leech. The extra sail area gained from this shape is called the roach, which is nearly impossible to accommodate in the confines of a backstay. Hoyt says that the 38’s rig has the same sail area as that of a traditional triangular main and a 160 genoa, which is difficult to handle during tacks and jibes.

We unrolled the jib and set off on a close reach, topping out at 7.9 knots in 16.5 knots of true wind. Downwind in 13 knots of true wind and with the jib boomed out, we saw 6 knots over the ground. The Jib Boom, sheeted to a traveler on the trunk cabin, takes the drama out of tacking and jibing — simply turn the wheel. Steering was smooth and quick. I needed a light touch on the wheel, making only the smallest of corrections, to keep the boat in the groove.

All of the lines run beneath the deck and emerge at the helm. Sheet stoppers and an electric winch on both sides of the cockpit, just forward of the wheel, take care of the sail-handling chores. Bins molded into the winch pedestals hold the tails of the lines, keeping the cockpit free of clutter. The wheel is large enough to let the helmsman steer from the coamings.

Minimal accommodations — enclosed head, small galley (two-burner Force 10 stove and oven, sink), drop-leaf table, hanging locker, V-berth, and enough stowage to see a couple through a four-day weekend — befit the AE 38’s purpose. White laminates trimmed in varnished teak recall the interior style that the Herreshoff yachts made famous nearly 100 years ago. The interior of the 38 feels warm and cozy, a great place to hide from inclement weather at anchor or under way.

And what about that one part eagle? An alerion (of French origin and also spelled allerion) is a heraldic eagle. Perhaps Capt. Nat thought his original Alerion announced a new way to enjoy sailing. The AE 38 certainly does.


Contact Us

For more information about this yacht please contact Tom Harney.
We look forward to working with you!

Jordan Yacht and Ship Co.

2805 E OAKLAND PARK BLVD
#413
Fort Lauderdale FL 33306 USA
Phone: 1-954-522-8650
Fax: 1-954-736-1648
Email: sales@jordanyachts.com
Website: http://www.jordanyachts.com

Jordan Yacht and Ship provides the best service for our customer, be it power or sail, buyer or seller. Our seasoned team of yacht brokers and support groups would like to help you.


Tom Harney

2805 E OAKLAND PARK BLVD
#413
Fort Lauderdale FL 33306 USA
Office: 1-954-522-8650
Fax: 1-954-736-1648
Cell: 954 328 9778
Email: tomharney@jordanyachts.com


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International Yacht Brokers Association - Tom Harney, Active Member - Vessel ID:  2813799