Bayfield 40


The Bayfield 40 is a Canadian sailboat that was designed by Ted Gozzard for cruising and first built in 1982.

Production

The design was built by Bayfield Boat Yard in Clinton, Ontario, Canada, starting in 1984, but the company went out of business in 1988 after a factory fire and production ended then.

Design

The Bayfield 40 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of balsa-cored fibreglass, with wood trim. It has a staysail ketch rig, with aluminum spars, a clipper bow with a bowsprit and trailboards, a raised counter transom, a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed long keel. It displaces and carries of lead ballast.
The boat has a draft of with the standard keel.
The boat is fitted with a Japanese Yanmar 4JHE diesel engine of or a Westerbeke diesel for docking and manoeuvring. The fresh water tank has a capacity of.
The design has sleeping accommodation for six people, with two double berths aft with optional raisable privacy panels in between and a "U"-shaped settee in the main cabin with a drop-down table that converts to a double berth. The galley is located on the port side forward. The galley is "U"-shaped and is equipped with a two-burner propane-fired stove, an electric refrigerator and a sink. A navigation station is aft of the galley, on the port side. The head is located just aft of the forepeak and includes a shower. The forepeak houses sail lockers and the anchor locker, accessible from the deck above.
Ventilation is provided by a port and hatch each in the aft cabins, plus two forward opening hatches and two opening ports in the head. There is a total of ten opening ports and four opening hatches, plus a large opening skylight just aft of the main mast.
For sailing the design is equipped with a total of 11 winches for the halyards and the sheets.

Operational history

In a 1994 review of the Bayfield 40, Richard Sherwood wrote, "the lines of the hull are traditional. The foresail rig is unusual in a big ketch. Cabin layout, with a midships galley and no vee berths, is distinctly different."