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The Mk II Moth TAMBU on display at Wharf 7 as part of the Sydney Heritage Fleet collection of s…
Tambu
The Mk II Moth TAMBU on display at Wharf 7 as part of the Sydney Heritage Fleet collection of s…
The Mk II Moth TAMBU on display at Wharf 7 as part of the Sydney Heritage Fleet collection of small vessels. In the background is a 1980s scow Moth with alumimum wings.
Photographer Andrew Frolows, ANMM

Tambu

Vessel numberHV000048
Sail Number610
Designer
Date1962
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 3.35 m x 1.26 m (11 ft x 4.15 ft)
DescriptionTAMBU is a snub bow or scow shape, and the MK II design was the mainstay of the Moth class for a long period. They were simple to build and TAMBU was made by its owner from a plywood kitset. It features a shallow cockpit with footstraps for hiking out over the side. The cockpit was self draining and had a small beam to mount a mainsheet winch. TAMBU sailed with the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron, which supported a large fleet of MK II Moths for members use as sail training dinghies. Before it was donated to the Sydney Heritage Fleet, it was used on Lake Macquarie for recreational fun. In 2006 TAMBU is on display at Wharf 7, Darling Harbour.

The MK II Moth design was influenced by the North American scows which raced on their inland lakes. Like those scows, the flat bottomed hull is best sailed upwind on an angle of heel to reduce wetted surface, and the square sides are effective in terms of providing lateral resistance. Len Morris had built the first Australian Moth called OLIVE in the late 1920s which was a scow shape, and then another scow design called FLUTTERBY in 1932, and the MK II was a significant step forward from FLUTTERBY. Following the widespread success of the MK II, and then the Peter Cole designed 'mouldie' moth from the late 1950s, the scow concept remained the dominant hull form in the Australian Moth Class for a long period.

There were many further developments until skiff shapes made breakthroughs in the late 1970's and the class evolved further with these narrower hull forms. In 2006, skiff moths on hydrofoils have become established as the winning combination.
SignificanceTAMBU is a plywood sailing and racing dinghy built in NSW in 1962. It is significant as an example of the Australian MK II Moth, an important class of sailing dinghy designed in 1946 by Len Morris. The class has now become one of the leading edge devlopment classes in the world.

OLIVE on display at Albert Park Yacht Club Victoria
Len Morris
1931
JANAWAY  in 2011
Sid Perry
1938
AUSTRALIA II when on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum in the 1990s.
Steve Ward
1982
NABILLA on display at the Axel Stenross Maritime Museum in Port Lincoln, South Australia.
Slazengers Ltd
1945
YARRAWONGA in 2016
Charles Larson
1939
COSI FAN TUTTE, NS 2154 on display in 2009
Norman Joel
mid 1960s
HMAS OVENS on display at WAMM 2013
Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Co Ltd
1967
The Prot-Craft surf ski remains in good condition, and shows the basic arrangement of these ear…
Prott-Craft
1947
RHYTHM relaunched
Athol Rowe
1957
CHERANA in 2010
Trevor Gowland
1959