MC Sailing Association

Class contact information.

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Class Email

Class Website

One-Design Class Type: Dinghy

Was this boat built to be sailed by youth or adults? Both

Approximately how many class members do you have? 1800+

Join/Renew Your Class Membership – Click here

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mc class sailboat

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mc class sailboat

About MC Sailing Association

The MC Sailing Association originally formed in Shreveport LA, 1971. Since then, the MC class has grown to be one of the top one-design sailboat racing classes in North America. The scow design maximizes speed yet provides unmatched stability. There are more than 110 active fleets nationwide. An original design by the Melges family in 1956, it is unique in the fact that you can sail single-handed or double-handed. Sailing solo is easy, taking a crew is fun! The MC class is not just about racing — it has also been described by many people outside of the class as a very enjoyable and fun group to spend a weekend with!

Boats Produced: 2800+

Class boat builder(s):

Melges Performance Sailboats P.O. Box 1 N598 Zenda Road Zenda, Wisconsin 53195 USA

Phone +1 262 275 1110 Fax +1 262 275 8012

Email [email protected]

Approximately how many boats are in the USA/North America? 2800+

Where is your One-Design class typically sailed in the USA? List regions of the country:

The contiguous United States plus Quebec

Does this class have a spinnaker or gennaker? No

How many people sail as a crew including the helm?  1-2

Ideal combined weight of range of crew:  130-260lbs (singlehanded), 180-340 (with crew)

Portsmouth Yardstick Rating:   89.4

Boat Designed in  1956

Length (feet/inches): 16

Beam: 5’8″

Weight of rigged boat without sails: 420

Draft: ~3 ft (0.91 m) with a bilge board fully extended

Mast Height: 33’7″

Coaching or Clinic Resources

Tuning guides tuning guides tuning guides, class rules (pdf doc).

Back to One-Design Central

Copyright ©2018-2024 United States Sailing Association. All rights reserved. US Sailing is a 501(c)3 organization. Website designed & developed by Design Principles, Inc. -->

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In Good Company with the MC Scow

  • By Dave Powilson
  • Updated: October 19, 2021

E Scow race

When Scott Harestad describes sailing MC Scows, his eyes light up with the expectation of a kid on Christmas morning. You can almost feel the exuberance. “The acceleration in the puffs is just amazing!” he says gesturing outward, his face slightly reddening with excitement and eyes widening like he’s suddenly been transported onto a wild reach on some distant lake. His speech quickens, and he shifts his weight from one foot to the other. “And,” quickly catching a breath, “you’re constantly working the controls—cunningham, vang and mainsheet—to keep it there.” Then he’s suddenly on dry land again and just as quickly asks, “Have you sailed one?”

I have, so he pivots to Jen Edney, our photographer, who is standing nearby.

“How about you? Ever sail an MC?”

And before Edney has a chance to finish saying she hasn’t, he’s at work, trying to set up a time and place to make it happen.

Harestad is no fly-by-night MC Scow proselytizer. He’s earned his stripes through 40 years of participation and is on his fourth boat. From Spring Lake, Michigan, Harestad travels a lot, living by the adage “you go to their regatta and they’ll come to yours.” And as current class president, he’s eager to tick off the latest class success stories to anyone who will listen. Recently, he notes, they have five active sailmakers and a New Jersey fleet that’s blossomed from five boats to 30 in a year and a half. And now, at the class’s 50th Anniversary National Championship held at Clear Lake, Iowa, where there’s 119 boats, is a class record.

Anniversary regattas are nothing new in the one-design ­sailing landscape, but only a few draw such big fleets. When that happens, it’s not just a testament to longevity, but also a ­barometer of the class’s future. The MC has come a long way from its first national championship, held in early October 1971 in Shreveport, Louisiana. That event—won by hull No. 10—drew a dozen sailors, all with wide-eyed optimism about the future of this new Melges-designed scow. Andy Burdick is the president of Melges Performance Sailboats and holder of a Tom Brady-like record of 12 MC national titles. He says: “It wasn’t until the 1980s and ‘90s that production numbers started to get really big—over 100 MCs a year. Lately, it’s averaged around 50 a year.”

Still, that’s a number most classes can only envy.

Part of the MC’s success lies with the Melges traveling road show, where a trailer would be loaded up at the factory in Zenda, Wisconsin, and the driver would be given marching orders not to come back until the trailer was empty. It worked. There are now more than 2,800 MCs, with 662 of them holding class ­memberships—up from 574 in 2020.

As another indicator of the class’s well-being, if you want a new boat, the going wait is three months. And good used boats are rare as hens’ teeth. In fact, at the championship’s Saturday-night annual meeting, Harestad pushed the idea that everyone should buy new boats so the market would get an injection of affordable used boats. The demand is certainly there, and the boats hold their value, so why not? Dan Allen from Clear Lake, who has a new boat on order, sold his boat right after the regatta for just a few hundred dollars less than he bought it for six years ago.

Designed as a scaled-down, simplified version of the C Scow, the MC (the “M” is for Melges) is basic: a three-stayed rig and only five sail controls—mainsheet, traveler, cunningham, outhaul and vang. It’s easy to transport on a small trailer and simple to rig. It’s the least expensive of the Melges scows and, because it’s not sailed flat, is easier to hike on than most dinghies. Consequently, the class continues to draw a lot of master sailors. Witness the 2020 Masters National Championship, which drew 109 boats, also held at Clear Lake.

The class, however, is doing well at attracting racers from the opposite end of the age spectrum. “Some of the kids coming out of the junior program seem to feel that this is an old person’s boat,” says Dan Quiram from Pewaukee Lake, “but then they try a C Scow, which takes a lot of strength, and quickly realize this is a great boat for them.”

More than a half-dozen youth skippers are sprinkled into the 50th anniversary fleet.

Conceived as a singlehander, MC sailors regularly bring a crew aboard, especially when the wind is above 10 knots. In fact, unless you’re well over 200 pounds, you probably need to have a crew to be competitive when the wind’s up. The ideal total weight in a breeze is 210 to 380, which means it works well for a lot of husband-wife and parent-child teams.

E Scow

The crew option has also been a great promotional tool. “I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve taken people with me on the MC who’ve never sailed before because all they really have to do is switch sides when we tack or jibe,” Burdick says. “They can get involved as much as they like with the sail controls and boards. I’ve seen a lot of people get into the sport just because they’ve gone for that ride.”

One case in point is Annie Samis, a 14-year-old junior sailor from Chicago, whose background includes Optis and Lasers. Never having sailed an MC, she was convinced to put her name on the 2021 Nationals crew list and was paired with Richard Blake, from the Hoover Sailing Club in Ohio. She got a chance to first sail with him in the practice race, but it didn’t take her long to get hooked.

“It’s so much fun!” she gushes with the enthusiasm of a high-school cheerleader. Samis and Blake already have plans to sail in a future Nationals as well as at the Hoover SC. As a bonus, her name was drawn in the raffle at the Saturday-night party that produced five winners of new sails, one from each of the class’s sailmakers—not a bad way to enter the class. The five sailmakers donated the sails, and raffle proceeds went to Clear Lake Youth Sailing.

Although the controls are basic, the MC is a bit like a saxophone—easy to play, but difficult to play really well. Excellence can sometimes take years. Maybe that’s why some of the best in the fleet are those who’ve been at it the longest—those in the masters, grand masters and mega masters groups. Almost 70 percent of the 2021 Nationals fleet were masters.

Scott Harestad

Quiram started racing MCs when he was 21, and at the time, he says, he thought to himself, “‘I hate those old masters bastards!’ Then I became a master, and I said, ‘I hate those old grand masters bastards!’ And now I’m an old grand master.”

There are also idiosyncrasies unique to scows. Former Finn sailor Andy Casy from Oklahoma says: “It’s challenging because you have a leeboard going out at one angle and the mast at another angle, and you have to get the right dynamics going to make it all work. You can have two boats in the same wind, and one will be 15 degrees higher than the other, just because that boat has ­everything working right.”

Matt Fisher points to the challenge of a blunt bow and big ­mainsail. “It can be a tough boat to sail downwind in a big breeze, as it’s easy to submarine the bow,” he says. “You have to go more by the lee than you’d think and really work to steer around the waves.”

Still, as Dan Wilson from Indianapolis points out, there’s a wide range of abilities at regattas. “No matter where you are,” he says, “you can find a group to race against at your level.”

The MC has one builder, Melges, which has been the case since the beginning, except for a period in the 1980s and ‘90s when Johnson Boatworks began building them, but it went out of business in 1998. Having one builder has added stability to the class, something highly valued in most one-designs.

Steve Everist

There have been subtle changes over the years, such as the ­addition of a mast-base pivot plate, which allows one person to raise the mast instead of two. And from around 2010 through 2017, Melges produced a sealed-cockpit version, in part to minimize the amount of water in the boat when capsized. The builder then went back to the open-cockpit layout but removed the aft deck, which, among other things, made it easier to roll and store the sail. “Melges has been good at responding to what we want,” Harestad says, “and that’s been a real plus.”

Admit it or not, there’s more to a regatta than just the racing. Iowa’s Clear Lake YC proved this over a three-day national championship that was never completed, thanks to a rotation of no wind, rain, severe winds and thunderstorms. On this particular weekend, sailboat racing throughout the Midwest encountered similar conditions. Up north, A Scows were skunked on the first day of their US Nationals on Wisconsin’s Pewaukee Lake, eventually getting in four races over the next two days, and Chicago fleets racing on Lake Michigan reported tornadoes. For the purely race-centric, the apocalypse was surely at hand.

But from a broader perspective, the MC Scow 50th Anniversary event demonstrated resiliency to uncooperative weather and the ability to still chalk up a win of sorts, presenting a model for how to do a lot with just a little. While the weather allowed completion of just one race (the class minimum is three for a championship), the emphasis Clear Lake YC had placed on the nonracing side was the regatta equivalent of a winning lotto ticket.

Dan Allen and Riley Cooney

Understand that this is no large yacht club, neither in numbers nor size—the 150 members occupy a small building on the site of a former Jaycee’s bathhouse at the base of Main Street. The building blends in well with the lakefront, evoking a late 19th or early 20th century railroad station, complete with wide roof overhangs around the perimeter. Founded in 1935 by “Cookie” Cook and a few others, it’s on public property, which makes it accessible for junior sailing lessons. There’s one ramp and a single dock with three fingers. Membership is $170 a year. Juniors are free. That the club’s volunteers pulled off the logistics of managing 105 visiting boats plus the home boats is nothing short of remarkable. Certainly, there was a ton of work, but they take it all with a dose of Midwestern modesty.

“We started organizing this right after the masters championship here last September,” says Stu Oltrogge, the event’s co-chair, “so we had the highway basically already built.”

Oltrogge’s wife, Judy, recruited 55 volunteers to handle the onshore activities—meals, registration, etc.—while another 25 took care of launching, haul-out and spectator boats. That’s a ­considerable volunteer corps given the size of the membership.

Clear Lake is just over 5 miles long, and the racing area at the south end of the lake is 2 miles in diameter, with an average water depth of 12 feet. It’s unique in that the water level is 100 feet higher than the surrounding area, which, in normal times, should increase the chances of good winds. Apart from sailing, Clear Lake is most known for the Surf Ballroom, where, in 1959, Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper last performed before their plane crashed a few miles outside of town. While those musicians put Clear Lake on the map, it’s a vibrant, iconic Midwestern town with lots of activities every week, ranging from concerts at the lakeside band shell, to boat tours on a stern-wheeler, to farmers markets on Main Street.

There was also an intentional effort by Clear Lake YC to keep this event “small town.” “We decided we wanted to put groups of folks all around the lake,” says Mark Tesar, Oltrogge’s co-chair counterpart, “having them stay with host families or at an Airbnb.” Such a move was in part a muted response to lingering pandemic concerns, but also just a large dose of Iowan hospitality. The result was a handful of encampments of sorts. For instance, 13 Michigan sailors stayed at the unique “Pyramid House” along the lake’s north shore, a crew that included three national champions.

Jamie Searles

And then there was “the Compound,” where I was lucky enough to land a spot. I’m not sure whether it was a group of three houses based around three docks full of scows or whether it was three docks full of scows based around three houses. Either way, Mark Tesar, his brother Todd, and Mr. and Mrs. Oltrogge opened up their homes to MC sailors and made it available as a base for other boats. With plenty of food, beverages and shade on the porches, it would be tough to find a nicer place to hang out when the wind doesn’t materialize. With 17 MC Scows in front of their houses, there were more one-designs than you might see in front of a lot of YCs.

With visiting as well as local boats in the water and on vacant hoists along their docks, one could be sailing in less than 10 minutes and efficiently to the race area. Even better, with the racing area so close at hand, box lunches were available each morning at Clear Lake YC for people to take to their lodgings, and the plan was to sail a couple of races in the morning, come in for lunch, then sail an afternoon race. It was all very civilized.

Each private home, like most along any inland lake, has the requisite lakeside deck ringed with chairs and chaise-style lounges, with coolers readily at hand, and those became the hangouts during nonracing times, which meant they got a lot of use at this year’s event.

No doubt, the MC 50th Nationals will go down in class history as the regatta that wasn’t. Yet it was an opportunity for those who hadn’t seen each other since pre-pandemic days to reconnect—a reunion of sorts. So, it certainly was a regatta for the sailors looking to visit after a year of COVID-19 social denial. For Todd Tesar, it all felt normal. “We usually travel to a lot of the lakes around here and see the same guys all the time,” he says. “We stay at their homes; they stay at ours; we go to their weddings.”

Cam McNeil, who decisively won the event’s one and only race, says, “Despite the lack of races, it was still great to see old friends and meet new people.”

And that really is what this particular national championship is all about—gathering with friends, in honor of a beloved boat that loves you back.

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MC Scow Fleet 27

mc class sailboat

MC Scows are an active fleet at Union and race in the Portsmouth handicap fleet.

The MC Scow is a fast, flat-bottomed, 16-foot dinghy, designed by Buddy Melges and Melges Boatworks in 1971. The boat is rigged with one mainsail, to go over rather than through the water, so it can really get up on a plane and go. The boat is sailed either single or double handed depending upon the wind speed. Top end recommended crew weight of from 250-310 pounds.

The MC class is one of the top one-design sailboat racing classes in North America. Today there are 104 fleets across the US and Canada with an active Association Membership of nearly 400 racers. Regattas are held across the country throughout the season.

Don’t let the non-traditional look of these boats fool you. Those who race them all admit that their large sail and hull shape make them a fast lake boat. The fleet owns a loaner boat for those who would like to try them out. Contact Jenny Sutton at  [email protected] , if you have an interest in taking a test sail or racing with us.

MC Scow Class Page MC Scow Specifications

Specifications:

Length 16’
Beam 5’ 8”
Weight 420 lbs
Cat rigged
Mainsail 135 square feet
Double bilge boards
Single outboard rudder

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National Champions and aspiring sailors are turning to Quantum for a fast, reliable sail with the power to elevate their sailing performance. The Quantum MC Scow Mainsail performs well in unstable breezes by providing exceptionally easy mode changes for the greatest speed.

Our MC Scow experts designed a sail that brings peak performance, reliable shape, and flexibility to the Scow class. This sail has given sailors the chance to win Nationals, Mid-Winters, and any high-level regatta they encounter, while making sailors fast around their local evening races. The MC Scow Mainsail is a high performing, stable sail with resistance to stretch that makes it the perfect choice for both a day sailor and a national champion.

MC Scow Mainsail

MC Scow Powerzone

MC Scow Powerzone

mc class sailboat

The Quantum Powerzone is just that – a powerful sail for the racing sailor who needs that extra punch in all conditions. Recommended for sailors 185 pounds or more and especially for those who sail with a crew member. Material and technology advancement enhance this sail’s speed and durability. The Powerzone has improved radial corner reinforcements, an additional window for visibility, and a lens foot for greater depth, power, and downwind performance. Quantum Sails Zenda orders include a personalized Quantum sail bag, sail numbers, battens, MC Class Royalty, and telltales.

Please purchase sails through Quantum Sails Zenda 262-275-1110 .

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MC Scow Speed Mainsail

The Quantum Speed Sail is an all-purpose sail and a must-have for your MC inventory. Usable in all conditions, this design works well for any size MC sailor. If you are a smaller sailor or one that sails single-handed the majority of the time, you will want to consider the Quantum Speed Sail. This sail features all your favorite design aspects plus a new high-visibility window. Quantum Sails Zenda orders include a personalized Quantum sail bag, sail numbers, battens, MC Class Royalty, and telltales.

MC Scow Accessories

Choose a team member.

Harry Melges III

Harry Melges III

Harry Melges III has worked in the sail making and sailboat building businesses his entire life. Growing up in a family business that supplies high-performance sails and sailboats, Harry was constantly thinking of ways to push the boundaries. How can we sail a boat faster, make a sail faster, or build a boat better? Melges' mission has been to encourage more people to participate in the sport we love by bringing forward products that make boats easier and more fun to sail and improving quality and value with every new addition to the Melges line-up. From a young age Harry spent much of his time crawling around the sail loft, learning from the artisans of the 70s and 80s how to make sails the "old school" way, something that is somewhat lost in our computer world. Taking that experience and blending it with today's technology has produced some of the fastest sails in our one-design classes through the years. Harry is thrilled to be joining Quantum Sails, a company with values similar to Melges, and fully committed to promoting and growing the great sport of sailing while delivering the highest quality products at the best value. "I'm excited to be working with an American company that always makes the customers' needs its number-one priority."

Career highlights

Andy Burdick

Andy Burdick

Andy Burdick has been a lifelong ambassador for the Inland Lake Yachting Association and a tireless advocate for the sport of sailing. He eagerly shares his skills and knowledge with anyone who inquires, routinely leading youth sailing clinics and proudly representing 4 generations of Burdick sailors. He has won over 60 championships during the course of his sailing career, spanning four decades in many classes. Andy's rich knowledge of each Melges class makes him a unique resource for our customers and an excellent addition to the team here at Quantum Sails. His attention to detail and emphasis on customer service make him well suited to help you with any needs you may have.

Eddie Cox

Eddie grew up on White Bear Lake, Minnesota where he began racing Melges X-Boats as a junior sailor and was the head coach of the race teams from 2011-2015. Eddie attended Hobart College in Geneva, NY where he was a 4-year starter on the sailing team. Straight out of college in 2016, Eddie started working for Melges Performance Sailboats, where he oversees sales and plays a pivotal role in the development of boats such as the new Melges 15. Eddie actively races A Scows, E Scows, MCs, Melges 24s, Melges 14s, and Melges 15s.

Date Regatta Result
Aug 14, 2024 1
Jul 14, 2024 1
Jun 9, 2024 1
Apr 28, 2024 1
Apr 21, 2024 1
Mar 17, 2024 2024 MC Scow Midwinter Championship 1, 8
Jan 27, 2024 1, 4, 5, 6
Nov 12, 2023 2, 4, 6, 8
Jun 11, 2023 1
May 7, 2023 1, 2, 5, 8
Mar 12, 2023 3, 4, 9, 10
Jan 31, 2023 1, 6, 7
Nov 13, 2022 1
Oct 2, 2022 1
Sep 18, 2022 1, 2, 4
May 15, 2022 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Apr 24, 2022 1st
Mar 20, 2022 1, 4, 6, 10
Jan 30, 2022 1, 4, 9
Nov 14, 2021 1, 7, 10
Sep 26, 2021 1, 2, 3, 4, 6

Q&A with the 2022-23 MC TRIPLE CROWN CORINTHIAN CHAMPION...

Sail Your MC Faster & Smarter

MC Scow Spotlight - 2022 Season

Q&A WITH MAREK VALASEK, 2022 MC MIDWINTER CHAMPION

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MC Scow User Guide, Part 1: Boat Setup and Maintenance

The MC Scow class is growing rapidly. Some of the sailors joining the class don’t have much sailing experience, so we decided to develop an MC Scow user guide to help them learn the basics quickly.

There are also plenty of MC tips on the MC Sailing Association (MCSA) website and the Melges website. Be sure to join the MCSA. This organization provides tremendous value to the class.

SailZing’s MC Scow User Guide

Our MC Scow user guide covers what you need to know to get started in the MC, with plenty of tips to make the process easier and links for more information. We’ll publish it in three parts:

Download part 1 of the user guide (pdf) here . Part 1 describes the MC scow in some detail and provides set-up and maintenance tips.

To whet your interest, here are a few of the many questions answered in Part 1.

MCSA website Melges Performance Sailboats website SailZing MC Scow category

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MC Scow insignia

MC Scow is a 16 ′ 0 ″ / 4.9 m monohull sailboat designed by Melges/Johnson and built by Johnson Boat Works and Melges Performance Sailboats starting in 1965.

Drawing of MC Scow

mc class sailboat

Rig and Sails

Auxilary power, accomodations, calculations.

The theoretical maximum speed that a displacement hull can move efficiently through the water is determined by it's waterline length and displacement. It may be unable to reach this speed if the boat is underpowered or heavily loaded, though it may exceed this speed given enough power. Read more.

Classic hull speed formula:

Hull Speed = 1.34 x √LWL

Max Speed/Length ratio = 8.26 ÷ Displacement/Length ratio .311 Hull Speed = Max Speed/Length ratio x √LWL

Sail Area / Displacement Ratio

A measure of the power of the sails relative to the weight of the boat. The higher the number, the higher the performance, but the harder the boat will be to handle. This ratio is a "non-dimensional" value that facilitates comparisons between boats of different types and sizes. Read more.

SA/D = SA ÷ (D ÷ 64) 2/3

Ballast / Displacement Ratio

A measure of the stability of a boat's hull that suggests how well a monohull will stand up to its sails. The ballast displacement ratio indicates how much of the weight of a boat is placed for maximum stability against capsizing and is an indicator of stiffness and resistance to capsize.

Ballast / Displacement * 100

Displacement / Length Ratio

A measure of the weight of the boat relative to it's length at the waterline. The higher a boat’s D/L ratio, the more easily it will carry a load and the more comfortable its motion will be. The lower a boat's ratio is, the less power it takes to drive the boat to its nominal hull speed or beyond. Read more.

D/L = (D ÷ 2240) ÷ (0.01 x LWL)³

Comfort Ratio

This ratio assess how quickly and abruptly a boat’s hull reacts to waves in a significant seaway, these being the elements of a boat’s motion most likely to cause seasickness. Read more.

Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam 1.33 )

Capsize Screening Formula

This formula attempts to indicate whether a given boat might be too wide and light to readily right itself after being overturned in extreme conditions. Read more.

CSV = Beam ÷ ³√(D / 64)

Based on the J SCOW of the the mid-1950’s. (Designed and built by John O. Johnson). Significantly updated by Melges.

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1994 Johnson MC Scow cover photo

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THE MELGES C SCOW

STRONG ONE-DESIGN FAMILY RACING

THE MELGES C SCOW ®

The Melges C Scow was the first class of scow built by Harry Melges, Sr. in 1945. It quickly became known for cerebral, tactical skills being central to success on the water.

Inspired by more than 100 years of competitive racing, this cat-rigged, maneuverable sailboat is great fun and a total pleasure to sail. A modern, versatile and easy-to-sail boat, it accommodates 2-3 crew and is super-charged with a large, powerful mainsail.

Built with integrity, the Melges C Scow is fast and calibrated superlatively for speed. It is one of the most friendly and popular classes in the Melges Scow family, producing as many as 80+ boats on the starting line.

mc class sailboat

20 ft 6.096 m
6 ft 9 in 2.057 m
650 lbs 294.835 kg
216 sq ft 20.067 m
2-3

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Quantum Sails – C Scow Sails

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Quantum Sails Tuning Guide – Updated November 2020

July 14, 2023

Quantum Sails Leads Summer Events

April 27, 2023

Melges & Quantum Sails Zenda to Host Spring Clinic at Minnetonka Yacht Club

December 6, 2022

Top Upgrades for 2023

January 20, 2022

New Clinics Announced for 2022

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  1. Home

    Learn about the MC Scow, a fast and stable one-design sailboat that can be sailed solo or double-handed. Find active fleets, upcoming events, history, book, and more on the official site of the MC Sailing Association.

  2. MC Sailing Association

    Learn about the MC scow, a fast and stable dinghy that can be sailed solo or with a crew. Find out the history, design, features, and fleets of this popular sailboat class in North America.

  3. PDF MC Scow User Guide

    Learn the basics of the MC Scow class, a fast and fun one-design boat with over 110 fleets in the U.S. This guide covers the history, design, care, and maintenance of the MC Scow hull and rig.

  4. Association -General Information

    Learn about the MC Scow, a one-design sailboat that can be sailed single-handed or double-handed. Find out how to join, charter, or start a fleet, and access the MCSA website, social media, and regatta information.

  5. MC Sailing Association

    MC Sailing Association, Mukwonago, Wisconsin. 1,434 likes · 225 talking about this. The MC class is one of the top one-design sailboat racing classes in North America.

  6. In Good Company with the MC Scow

    Learn about the MC Scow, a popular and versatile scow designed by Melges, with over 2,800 boats and 662 members worldwide. Read how the class celebrates its 50th anniversary with a record-breaking ...

  7. MC Sailing Association

    The MC class is one of the top one-design sailboat racing classes in North America. With over 80 regattas every year all over the country we have a robust and growing fleet. Come check us out!

  8. MC Scow

    MC Scow is an American sailing dinghy that was designed as a one-design racer and first built in 1956. It has a catboat rig, a reverse sheer scow hull, and dual retractable bilgeboards.

  9. Sailing the MC

    The shape of the hull, combined with a large sail plan, makes for a very fast and stable ride. If you check the handicap ratings, you will find that the MC, despite being only 16' long, can keep pace with many of the larger racing boats. Many people have tried to compare sailing a scow with a catamaran because, if you imagine having two hulls ...

  10. Welcome to the MC Sailing Association

    The MC Scow is a 16-foot sailboat that can be sailed by one or two people. The MC Sailing Association (MCSA) is the official organization for the MC Scow class, and it offers sailing news, events ...

  11. MC-Scow Sailing Speed Guide Plus Drills

    Learn how to sail fast and pass boats in the MC class by mastering heel angle, rudder, mainsheet, and other factors. This article by Henry Chesnutt, a top MC-Scow sailor, covers the basics and provides tips and videos.

  12. Union Sailing Club

    Learn about the MC Scow Fleet 27, also known as the ScowBoys, who race MC Scows at Union Reservoir and other venues in Colorado. MC Scows are fast, flat-bottomed, 16-foot dinghies that can plane and sail single or double handed.

  13. PDF MC Sailing Association

    The official document of the MC Sailing Association, a non-profit organization that promotes the sport and sportsmanship of the MC scow. It contains the by-laws, rules, specifications, and definitions of the MC scow class.

  14. MC Scow Sails

    The Quantum MC Scow Mainsail performs well in unstable breezes by providing exceptionally easy mode changes for the greatest speed. Our MC Scow experts designed a sail that brings peak performance, reliable shape, and flexibility to the Scow class. This sail has given sailors the chance to win Nationals, Mid-Winters, and any high-level regatta ...

  15. Melges MC Scow

    The Melges MC is a fast and stable scow sailboat that can be sailed single-handed or double-handed. It has a new open cockpit design, a powerful sail plan and a large fleet of over 100 active clubs in North America.

  16. MC SCOW

    MC SCOW is a cat-rigged scow sailboat designed by Melges and Johnson in 1956. It has a length of 16 feet, a sail area of 135 square feet, and a displacement of 420 pounds.

  17. About the MC Scow

    About the MC Scow

  18. M Scow

    The M Scow is a recreational sailboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim.It has a fractional sloop rig with tapered or untapered aluminum or wooden spars. The hull is a reverse sheer scow design, with dual internally-mounted rudders controlled by a tiller and a dual retractable bilgeboards.It displaces 440 lb (200 kg). [1] [2]The boat has a draft of 2.67 ft (0.81 m) with a ...

  19. MC Scow User Guide, Part 1: Boat Setup and Maintenance

    Learn the basics of MC Scow sailing with this user guide from SailZing.com. Find out how to rig, maintain, and upgrade your boat, and get tips on gelcoat care, hull structures, fittings, sails, and more.

  20. MC Scow

    MC Scow is a 4.9 m monohull sailboat with a scow hull and a cat rig. It was designed by Melges/Johnson and built by Johnson Boat Works and Melges Performance Sailboats since 1965.

  21. Melges C Scow

    The Melges C Scow is a fast and versatile boat that accommodates 2-3 crew and has a large, powerful mainsail. It is one of the most friendly and popular classes in the Melges Scow family, with a long history of competitive racing and tactical skills.

  22. Events

    Events. - Grid View. The event calendar shows upcoming club events. Select a view then use the navigation buttons to move between dates. Click on the event to view more information, including the event description, times, location, fees and any rules regarding attendance; you can also register for events from this screen.

  23. MEDAL MOMENT

    Highlights from the Medal Race of the Men's 49er class, as Isaac McHardie and William McKenzie race for gold on the water in Paris #olympics #paris2024 Your ...

  24. Touch of Class Magazine

    The official magazine of the MC Sailing Association, featuring articles, photos and news about the MC Scow class of sailboats. Download or view online the latest and past issues of Touch of Class Magazine.