Freedom 39

The Freedom 39, also called the Freedom 39 Express, is an American sailboat that was designed by Ron Holland and Gary Hoyt as a cruiser and first built in 1983.

The Freedom 39 was introduced at the same time as the related Freedom 39 PH design, a boat with a similar hull, but a schooner rig and a pilothouse.

Production
The boat was built by Tillotson Pearson in the United States for Freedom Yachts, starting in 1983.

Design
The Freedom 39 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wooden trim. It is a cat-rigged ketch, with carbon-fiber conventional booms and two free-standing carbon-fiber masts. It has an aft cockpit and features a raked stem, a slightly reverse transom, a skeg-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed fin keel. The design displaces 18500 lb and carries 5300 lb of lead ballast.

The boat has a draft of 5.50 ft with the standard keel fitted.

The boat is fitted with a British Perkins Engines 4-108 50 hp for docking and maneuvering. The fuel tank holds 80 u.s.gal and the fresh water tank has a capacity of 130 u.s.gal.

The design has sleeping accommodations for six people. It has a private, aft, double cabin, under the cockpit on the starboard side, two pilot berths in the main cabin and a double berth in the bow cabin. The galley is U-shaped and located on the port side, at the foot of the companionway steps. It includes a three-burner stove and double sinks. The head is located just aft of the bow cabin on the starboard side.