- How to Design a Motor Boat
- Hike You, a 20-foot skimmer
- Goblin, a 20-footer
- Panther, a 20-foot hydroplane
- Magnet, a 21-footer
- America, a 21-foot cruising runabout
- Curlew, a 22-footer for open waters
- Sandpiper, a 24-foot V-bottom
- L'Allegro, a 25-foot V-bottom ship
- Tuna, a 27-foot shallow-draft V-bottom craft
- Zora, a 28-foot round-bottom boat
- Trident, a 24-foot bottom cruiser
- Cygnet, a 25-foot cruiser with trunk cabin
- Halcyon, a 28-footer that's different
- Flashlight, a 30-foot V-bottom
- Dawn, a double-cabin bridge-deck cruiser
- Sunray, a 36-foot double-cabin cruiser
- Spook, a 36-footer with unusual accommodations
- Ruth, a 38-foot double-cabin cruiser
- Jerry, a 40-footer with small sail
- Penguin II, a 20-foot yawl with 10 h.p.
- Drift, a 20-foot sloop
- Victory, a 21-foot catboat
- Bonita, a 25-foot ketch
- Volante, a 25-foot waterline yawl
- White Cap, a 26-foot sloop
- Little Pal, a 23-foot catboat
- Gob, a 28-foot V-bottom auxiliary motor boat
- Carina III, a 30-foot yawl
- Chester, a 35-foot yawl
- Josephine, a 35-foot V-bottom craft with 15 h.p.
- Indrashama, a 35-foot schooner
- Pirate, a 60-foot ketch
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