Moore 24 Class Rules (2007)
As Commissioned of Carl Schumacher, Naval Architect, by Ron Moore
Adopted by Moore 24 National Association January 10, 1981
Amended: 10/86, 12/97, 12/03, 1/05, 11/06, 02/07, 11/07
I. Intent of Rules
It is the intention of these rules to provide a standard by which Moore 24s can race as a one-design class and that
all well-sailed boats shall have an equal chance of winning.
II. General Clause
The Moore 24 National Association reserves the right to interpret these rules as will best provide one-design
racing for the class. Anything not covered in these rules shall be subject to a ruling by the Governing Board as it
becomes necessary. The Governing Board shall have the authority to clarify, alter, and amend the Class Rules as
necessary to keep them current, provided the structure and intent of the rule is not changed (e.g. eliminating
reference to IOR standards and updating to ISAF standards, fixing typographical errors). Boats that benefit from
some unforeseen development not covered in these rules may have their eligibility determined at the discretion of
the Governing Board.
A boat’s hull, deck, appendages, spars, or rigging shall not be altered without prior approval from the Governing
Board. Any alteration that is made without approval shall render the boat's measurement certificate invalid and
disqualify the boat from one-design competition until a valid measurement certificate is obtained from the Class
Measurer. At the discretion of the Class Measurer, approved modifications may still require a boat to be
measured prior to being issued a new measurement certificate. The intent of this rule is to allow the Governing
Board the latitude to best protect the one-design characteristics of the Moore 24. Boats that benefit from
unforeseen developments not specifically covered in these rules may have their eligibility denied by the
Governing Board.
III. Hull and Deck
All hulls shall be standard Moore 24s built by the Moore Sailboat Shop, except hulls covered by the Grandfather
Clause below. Boats shall have an “all up” weight of not less than 2050 (two thousand fifty) pounds, including
mast, boom, spinnaker pole, all standing rigging and halyards. The boats shall be stripped of sails, safety gear,
personal gear, outboard motor, etc., before weighing. Underweight boats shall add weight by securing it to the
hull in the forepeak. The weight shall be secured at least 10 inches forward of the main bulkhead.
Extensive refairing of the hull, except in the area of repair, is prohibited. The intent of this rule is to have the boat
returned to the same condition it was in prior to being damaged.
IV. Keel
The keel shall be standard as supplied with the boat. Any attempt to alter the foil section is prohibited.
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Material: |
Lead |
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Minimum weight: |
1000 (one thousand) pounds |
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Length |
Thickness |
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30” waterline above keel bottom |
45-1/2” |
3-5/8” |
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1-1/2” waterline above keel bottom |
33-1/2” |
3-1/8” |
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Tolerance |
+/- 1” |
+/- 1/4" |
V. Rudder
The rudder shall be the standard as supplied with the boat, or identical to that if replacement is necessary. Any attempt
to alter the rudder in any way is prohibited.
VI. Mast and Rig
The mast shall be aluminum alloy of no less than 1.4 pounds per foot and fit through a 5” diameter circle. The mast
shall have one set of spreaders approximately 25” long and 13’ 8” above the deck. The top four feet of the mast may
be tapered. The centerline of the backstay pin shall be 4-1/2” +/- 1/2” from the backside of the mast in the horizontal
direction. The mast step and base must be fixed and shall not rotate or otherwise move while racing.
The standing rigging shall be 1x19 stainless steel wire. Wire diameter shall be 5/32” for the forestay and uppers, and
1/8’ for the backstay and lowers. The intersection of the centerline of the jib stay with the forward face of the mast
shall be no more than 26’ 3” (25’ 10-3/4” for SC models) nor less than 26’ 0” (25’ 7-3/4” for SC models) above the
deck. The bearing point of the spinnaker halyard shall be no more than 26’ 7” (26’ 2-3/4” for SC models) nor less than
26’ 1/2” (25’ 8-1/4” for SC models) above the deck. Headfoils, twinstays, gemini foils, etc., are allowed. Halyard
locks are permitted, but must be located within eight feet of the base of the mast.
There shall be a 1” wide band of contrasting color whose lower edge shall be no more than 25’ above the top of the
boom. The top of the boom, when projected at right angles to the mast, shall be 2’, 8” (2’ 3-3/4” for SC models) +/-
1/2” above the deck.
VII. Boom
The boom shall be an aluminum alloy capable of passing through a 5” diameter circle when stripped of hardware.
There shall be a 1” band of contrasting color whose inner edge shall be no more than 9’ 6” from the aft side of the mast.
VIII. Spinnaker Pole
The spinnaker pole length, when forced outboard in its fitting on the mast and set in the horizontal position athwart ships, measured from the centerline of the mast to the extreme outboard end of the pole and any fittings
used when the spinnaker is set, shall be no more than 9’ 9”.
IX. Sails
Boats shall be raced with a maximum of seven sails on board. These sails shall consist of:
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a. One main |
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b. Two spinnakers |
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c. Three jibs |
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d. One heavy weather jib, maximum 65% LP |
It is the intent that the heavy weather jib be designed for heavy weather conditions and not as a spinnaker staysail.
Except for spinnakers, the sails carried at the first start of a multi-race event must be carried in the entire regatta.
It is the intent of these rules that sails conform to both the class rules and the various measurement rules used for
handicap racing. All sails shall be measured from the junction of imaginary lines that form a sharp corner as they
extend from the actual lines of the foot, roach, or luff of a sail, beyond the rounded tack, clew, or head of that sail
(according to ISAF standards.)
The maximum jib LP is 14.63’ (150% of J) and it shall be made of material whose weight is no less than a
recognized sailmaker’s weight of three oz. per yard. The purpose of this rule is to prohibit specialty sails such as
drifters and bloopers.
Spinnakers shall conform to ISAF standards. Each shall have a maximum width of no more than 17.55’ or a
midgirth of less than 8.78’. The spinnakers shall be symmetrical and the luffs shall be no longer than 26.60’. The
material shall be no lighter than an actual weight of .9 oz. per sailmaker’s yard. The intent of this rule is to
prohibit 1/2 oz. spinnakers.
A carried second spinnaker is intended as a “backup”, and can be flown only if the original sail is seriously
damaged or lost. Skippers of boats flying a second spinnaker on any race day must be prepared to demonstrate to
a member of the Governing Board proof of damage to their original spinnaker. Skippers who choose to fly a
second spinnaker in accordance with the above, shall not revert to their first spinnaker within the same race or on
the same race day. In a multi-day regatta, damaged spinnakers may be replaced or repaired and used again on a
subsequent race day.
The headboard on the mainsail as measured from the luff of the sail including boltrope to the leech, shall be no
greater than 0.5’.
The mainsail shall have four equally spaced battens of the following lengths:
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Top 24” |
Middle (2) 38-3/4” |
Bottom 28-1/2” |
The leech shall not project beyond a straight line between the back of the headboard and the top batten, between
each batten, and between the bottom batten and the clew.
The mainsail shall have a midgirth of 6.5’ and a 3/4 girth of 3.91’ measured from the front of the headboard to the
clew. Cross measurements shall be the distance from the leech measurement points to the nearest point on the
fore edge of the sail including bolt rope. Points on the leech from which the cross measurements are taken shall
be determined bridging any hollows in the leech with straight lines.
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Sailmaker’s Specifications: |
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I = 26.25’ |
J = 9.75’ |
P = 25.00’ |
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E = 9.50’ |
LP = 14.63’ |
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X. Prohibitions
● Hydraulic adjustments
● Standing rigging, except backstay, adjustable while racing
● Through-deck spinnaker launchers
● Mast bending devices such as struts, rams, or midstays
● Coring, drilling out, rebuilding, replacing materials, grinding, or relocating standard equipment in any way to
improve pitching moment of inertia
● Stripping interior
● Rod rigging
● Running backstays
● Trapezes
● Removing foredeck hatch covers
XI. Minimum Equipment
An appropriate combination of anchor, chain, and line weighing at least 14 pounds, and PFDs for the entire crew.
XII. Hiking/Safety Straps
Crew may be outside lifelines, but hiking is restricted in that no part of the skipper’s or crew’s torso may extend
outside of a line drawn perpendicular to the water, bisecting the intersection of the topsides and deck, regardless
of the angle of heel. Hiking straps are allowed.
XIII. Grandfather Clause
Hulls #1—5 and 10 shall be allowed to race in the National Championships so long as their sails do not exceed
the normal Moore 24 sail plan and have a current measurement certificate. If any of these hulls are re-rigged, they
must use the standard Moore 24 mast and rigging.
XIV. Crew Weight Limit
The total crew weight limit is 825 pounds. At every Roadmaster event, skippers shall provide the organizing
authority with a crew list including the name and weight of each crewmember. This list must reflect the crew on
board for each race day. Each crewmember will be weighed at Championship Regattas and the Class Measurer or
his/her designee will certify each person’s weight.