FX-ONE Report!!
All,
Here is my report on the FX-1 from Hobie Cat. The impressions below come from my sailing the current production 17'-18' uni rig cats with daggerboards over the last 5 years. I tried very much to keep it straight to the point. This report is only my opinion and my views may not be shared by all readers. After just coming off an A class, I feel very comfortable with this report and the performance of the FX-1.
Bob Curry
Tacking:
The boat tacks and reacts very much like an A cat, just turn the tiller over and quickly get to the other side! I tried both leaving the sheet tension on and slightly easing it during the tacks. The boat responded better to a slight ease. In the 8-10kts of breeze, I found a slight roll tack best. This boat easily out-tacks the current uni rig production boats in the 17-18’ class.
Gybing:
Again, just like the A cat! A nice gentle arc produced the fastest speed out of the gybe.
Upwind:
The FX-One responded best to the traveler down about 2-4”with the outhaul slightly eased and the downhaul down just a bit (wrinkles out). My weight (168lbs) was right at the daggerboard and I was able to fly the trapeze easily. Every control line was sensibly located and easy to adjust. The boat reacts very well to puffs and accelerates better than the other current production lines. The mainsail could be a tad bit fuller up top for most US conditions.
Downwind:
Even though a bit heavier than the A class, this boat shares the same wide-groove characteristics of the wave piercing A cats. It accelerated smoothly and I was able to keep it in the groove for a long stretch without much attention. I was able to wildthing in puffs 10kts and greater.
How it looks…
This is the sexiest production boat I’ve ever seen! The wave piercing angled bows really shed the water and handle waves like a hot knife through butter. There is plenty of hull volume so it is not weight sensitive.
Overall Impression
This one is easy; it is a production version of the popular A class! Combined with a chute, this boat will really be a performer!! I could easily move it around on the beach with CatTrax which is a plus. Even though I spent about an hour and a half sailing, I can't wait to do it again and I'm very stoked this boat came along!!
Talk to Brad (www.sunjammers.com) in Panama City, Fl or Kirk at KeySailing in Pensacola, Fl. I think the FL guys will work with you. Brad is sailing in the Mega and you will probably have to wait to talk with him until the weekend.
Bob
Great report Bob! Is the boat you tested going to stay in the Panhandle, or is it going elsewhere?
I was wondering in your trial if you happened to capsize the boat; because I'm curious to know whether the boat is as difficult to right as the I17R.
I can right mine by really getting out on the daggerboards, but I'm afraid one of these times I'll have a daggerboard break.
Additionaly, I was wondering if you had experimented with any of the "righting poles" that are on the market?
Thanks for your time posting your feedback on the FX-1. It looks like a smart entry for Hobie into the Uni market.
I haven't looked into the DPN's on the boat, but I would think it should race pretty close to head-to-head with the I17R.
Mark MacNeil
I17R - USA110
Hi Bob- It is great to hear such an enthusiastic report on the FX-1. Please don't take this as mean spirited; I just think it will put your report in finer focus and remove some doubts some people may have. 1. Are you in any way involved in the distribution/class building effort of the class? 2. Why have you left the A Class? 3. Have you sailed the comparables such as the Inter 17R? Again, I mean no disrespect, just curious.
Jim,
I'll try my best to answer your questions..
1. I am not involved with the Hobie Co. or the class.
I do thank the Co. for letting me sail their boat at their dealer meeting.
2. I'm too rough (sail them hard) on the boats I own and I've always needed a "bulletproof" platform.
3. I've sailed the 5.5 Uni and I17R (downwind w/o chute) for the comparison.
Thanks for your questions for clarification!
Bob
Thanks for the reply. While I enjoy racing with a crew, I grew up on one man boats and enjoy the element of either winning or losing on my own merits. I think one of the worst things I hear in sailing is skippers blaming the crew for a bad finish. I am thinking of adding a one man (person) boat to the flotilla and I appreciate the input from this forum.
Bob,
Check my math and my assumptions on what the "SP" means on the multihull tables: 72.1-.972=71.13 DPN for the FX-1 with spinnaker.
Using the FX-1 finish time of 30 minutes::
FX-1: ct=30/71.13*100=42.18
With the FX-1 sailing 30 minutes therefore the I17R must
sail the same race in 28.09 minutes (x/66.6*100=42.18)
approx. 1 minute and 54 seconds faster (30-28.09=1.91).
Is your initial impression from sailing the boat match with this difference or is there simply not enough data yet to check a comparison?
Mark MacNeil
I17R USA110
PS: Of course if you were to get an FX-1 I would expect you to concede the 1m54s (and maybe a few more) and race boat for boat!
I did feel the boat is much faster in the transitions (tacking/gybing) and acceleration from a dead stop like on a starting line. There is really no data to do a good comparison at this time. If Brad has one with the chute, I'd like to spend a day in PC sailing your I17R and the FX for data gathering.
Bob
Hi Bob,
I also posted this on the other thread where weight was being discussed.
I weighed my FX-One using fairly accurate scales:
Total Weight (Uni-Configuration, no jib, no spinnaker) = 313 lbs (About 11 lbs lighter than Texel is reporting)
Breakdown:
Basic Platform (Hulls, Crossbar, Trampoline) 198
Mast (With spreaders and main halyard) 44
Steering System (Rudders, pins, slave bar, tiller ext) 25
Mainsail (w/ battens, boom, mainsheet& block, cunningham) 21
Dagger Boards 20
Rigging (Sidestays, forestay, 1 trapeze set) 5
Total 313
Jib Kit (Jib, upper and lower furler, halyard, blocks & jib sheet) 8
Steve Bellavia
Sources :
http://www.hobiecat.com/fx1.html
http:/
Quote 275 lbs = 125 kg's. for the FX-one without a spi
With your post we may conclude that the (newer and lighter?) FX-one is a shy 40 lbs above quoted weight.
I think that that was the main point of the thread.
I held back on several posts as I am obviously involved with a direct competitor of the FX-one; but this time the urge was to great. With activities like this I wouldn't be surprised if the boats measured by ISAF and Texel were unintentionally heavier than expected.
Flame me all you want too.
Wouter
Hi Wouter,
Not to forgive or condone Hobie, but they all lie. I purchased a brand new Beneteau 23.5 foot racer-cruiser monohull that was advertised as 2300 lbs, and actually weighed 3300 lbs. But what's 1000 lbs amongst friends?
I was told by the Hobie dealer that the weight (ca), as shown in your second URL (PDF file) is the "weight capacity", ie, the crew weight. Other borchures have shown 298 lbs as the weight of the boat, which would make my boat 15 lbs heavier than advertised.
All-in-all, it's still 60 lbs lighter than the boat I just sold, and lighter than an I-17 or Hobie 17 and very close to a 5.5Uni with Carbon mast and foils.
Looking at the breakdown, it's obvious (to me) that they need to spend a little more engineering time with that steering system (25 lbs - yikes!). Some immediate "remedies" could be to elimate the solid rudder pins and go to hollow stainless tube (about a .5 lb saved) and make the slave bar carbon tubing (another 1 lb maybe). Numerous lightening holes in the castings would help too. Also a carbon mast would go a long way to improving performance and knock another 15 lbs from the total. Carbon daggerboards should have been standard. (Another 10 lbs). But of course, a little late to do that now.
But I'm very happy with the boat ![]()
Steve

If I was in the market for a FX-1, I'd really be concerned about this weight discrepancy between what the owners are weighing in the field vs. what the manufacturer is claiming.
I went through the same thing when I owned a P-19. The class minimum was 385 lbs. but we saw new boats typically in the 395-415 lb. range. Most competitive sailors in any sailing class strive to get their boats to the class minimum weight and it's kinda hard to get there when the manufacturer is building boats 20-30 lbs heavier than the class minimum weight.
If I bought an FX-1 and found my boat to be 36 lbs. heavier than what it is supposed to be, I would ask for my money back! That's 13% heavier than the class minimum!!!!

I though you all might be interested in the actual FX-one class rules regarding crew weight and boat wieght. The boat weight includes spinnaker gear. That makes it sound like Steven's boat is spot on. I doubt the spinnaker gear weighs fourteen pounds, so he'll be a few pounds light. In my opinion that is perfect. You carry a little lead when the boat is new then after a few years and a few repairs you still have a minimum weight boat.
8. MINIMUM CREW WEIGHT
The Hobie FX-ONE shall have a minimum
combined crew weight of 72 kg (158.73 lbs.).
9. MINIMUM BOAT WEIGHTS
The minimum weight of a Hobie FX-ONE,
completely assembled with spinnaker and
running gear shall be 148.5 kg (327.39 lbs). See
Rule #19 of the General Rules.
I got it at the NAHCA web site under the "race managment" section. It is in PDF format so it requires the Adobe reader. It also includes the class rules for all of the currently raced Hobies. The FX-one is on page 17. Here is the Link:
http:/
George
How about this ?
In 1999 Glen Ashby (+Chris Chester) finished as 8th on a spi less Taipan 4.9 !
Second spi-less Taipan 4.9 in that same race was Steve Brewin and Helen Sharrock at place 9 !!
First I-17 spi was 151 th than.
Apparently the I-17 are getting faster but Glenn on a different boat isn't.
These (yours and mine) are all corrected time results ofcourse
Vicatman, I'm just puling your chain a bit here but all in good respect. I expect a return from you and am anxious to see if you can "up" me one. All in good taste ofcourse.
Wouter
I'm not one to get very excited about hardware (It's racing that I love) and not as qualified to comment on it as Bob Curry but I did sail the FX-1 at the Mega. I thought it was a very cool boat. What I do find exciting is the prospect that this boat could bring thoes who are into hardware together with thoes who's first priority is one design fleet racing to form a strong class....That would be very cool....Dan
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