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Beneteau Oceanis 36 CC
The french giant introduces several center cockpit designs, including this beamy 36-footer that sails well...for a family boat..
Center cockpit sailboats still make good cruisers. Time was (in the early 80s) the Morgan Out Island 41, a pioneer among center cockpit production boats, was the most popular auxiliary over 25 feet. The pendulum has since swung toward all-round performance and a yachtier aesthetic; nowadays most new cruising boats have aft cockpits. Still, the center cockpit alternative can be a good one.
Center cockpit cruisers offer the maximum in two-couple privacy, simplify control from the cockpit sail handling, afford superior maneuvering visibility, and most sailors find enclosed center cock- pits more secure than lower, more-open aft cockpits. And a center cockpit plan layers functions one atop the other to provide, especially in the 35 to 45-foot size range, the maximum in interior space and living room.
Taking one upwind in a chop may not be an exquisite experience and many are boxy and hard to look at but center cockpits have their strengths.
The Beneteau 36CC is a good example of the modern center cockpit cruiser. What mid-cockpit boats do well, she does remarkably well. Her accommodations are exceptional. And she is a better sailboat than her kind have tended to be. Making a hull that is one third as wide as it is long perform well is a trick. Making a snub-nosed, turtle-back profile look pretty is a trump. Designer Jean Berret (Berret/Racoupeau) and stylist Armel Briand, have, however, come quite close.
The Company
Beneteau is now the planets largest sailboat builder (over 25 feet). The company dates back to 1884 when Benjamin Beneteau founded a yard at Croix-de-Vie on the Atlantic Coast of France. Today, it is a worldwide operation, including a plant in South Carolina. It is hard to find economies of scale in sailboat building. Niche builders and custom shops are much more prevalent than colossi. Still, Beneteaus size offers advantages.
The hours that it takes to build a boat are a very significant variable in its price. From designed to be built stipulations in the planning stages through production line efficiencies and labor-saving automation, Beneteau succeeds at taking out of its boats hours that smaller builders can’t. Further benefits include serious purchasing power, ongoing in-house research and development, and the resources to en- gage design masters like Berret, Finot, Andre Mauric, Philippe Starck, Pinafarina, and Bruce Farr.
The Beneteau giant, though, employs a mere 1,800 people. It spans the globe but has kept sailors in the company loop, retained most customers as friends, and been responsive to market realities. It would be hard to confuse Beneteau chairwoman Annette Beneteau Roux with Henry Ford, and the Oceanis 36 is hardly a cruising Volkswagen. Still, Beneteaus size helps it market sailboats.
Jean Berrets rise in Grand Prix racing began in the 80s with Ton Cup successes and climaxed with the Beneteau One Ton that dominated Admirals Cup competition in 1987. He has since worked closely with Beneteau, drawing more than a dozen models in the First (racer/cruiser) line.
Beneteaus Oceanis (full cruising) line began in the early 80s with designs to emphasize ties with the elements instead of shielding sailors from the sea and sun. The Oceanis series was well-received, with their swim platforms, transom showers and hull windows. They left, however, something to be desired in point-to-point speed and sailing efficiency. New models, like the 45f5 from Farr, have helped address that. Enter now M. Berret, to add sizzle to the center cockpit cruisers.
The shape of the 36s hull throws no roadblocks in the way of performance. The hull began, in fact, as the First 36 performance cruiser. It has a narrow entry. The forebody is relatively straight sided. This entry wedge is what most tubby center cockpit hulls lack. The Oceanis 36CC is thus an improvement on the breed upwind. Her transition to wide-bodied midsections is graceful.
What is essentially a very beamy boat is differentiated from a swimming float by the way in which her sectional shape and hull rocker are massaged to make her powerful without being clunky. Her beam-to-length proportions are not sylph-like, but both wetted surface and displacement are kept to a minimum. She also has a long, gradual exit that lengthens her effective waterline. A deep (4′ 8″) high-aspect ratio rudder is generous. What it costs in wetted resistance is more than paid back through control. Given a 315 sq. ft. mainsail and a 6-foot deep keel, the hull works well for the First 36s7, which has the same hull. However, with a 258 sq. ft. mainsail and a 5′ 2″ wing keel, the Oceanis 36CC wont sail the same.
The First displaces 11,684 pounds, the Oceanis 13,382. Factor in the drag of the keel wings at moderate or slow speeds and performance suffers again. Add the reduced efficiency of a roller-furling main and performance goes down further. Even though its hull is race-bred and efficient, the Oceanis 36 has performance limitations. Her displacement/length ratio is 197, and the sail area/ displacement ratio is a lackluster 15.65.
But you can look at it the other way. The Oceanis 36 is built for comfort. She offers more head and elbow room, more usable space, than many larger boats. Putting all of that in a race-bred hull, while it doesn’t equal built for speed, still improves the sailing abilities of built-for-comfort. The rig is a standard, if slightly short, masthead configuration. The genoa is 60% of the overall sail area. It is an efficient and time-tested combination but one which means more muscle work in a breeze than many cruisers like to expend.
In 1988, Beneteau teamed up with Philippe Starck. Called the new le Corbusier by some art critics he made his name by designing furniture, then night clubs, then jewelry, even pasta. When it came to working with Beneteau, he said, Everyone has dreams in their head of how things should be. I try to match the thing to the dream. Boats are no different. Styling for the Firsts then went into an old time luxury liner motif on the inside and designer signature patches on the transoms (just like blue jeans). Beneteau still uses a designer/styl- ist modus operandi, but Armel Briand, stylist for the Oceanis 36, is more traditional than Starck. A faceted transom; a subdued, blister house line; and an elongated hull port are elements of his exterior style. Below there is nothing as unique as Starcks pewter fixtures, gull wing windows, and birds eye mahogany paneling, just understated wood and white with splashes of upholstery.
The Interior?While the Oceanis 36 is wide, shes not overwhelmingly deep. That helps her appearance, but it means that headroom throughout is limited to 6′ 1″ with 6-foot clearance in the head and galley/passageway. That said, the staterooms, head, galley, and saloon are all exceptionally roomy. The engine room (beneath the companionway) is also much bigger than most. Access to filters, injectors, oil fill, et. al., is superior. Hard to find in most boats this small, theres also realistic room for auxiliary machinery (air conditioning, generator, etc.).
While both platform double berths are wide, they are short (6′ 2″ aft and a tapered 6′ 4″ forward.) The aft cabin is a master cabin, however, with settee, vanity mirror, and hanging locker. Forward on the starboard side is a generous and well-designed head/shower. One of the few tight spots is where the forward head door swings open into the navigation area, but a disappearing seat for the oversized nav table helps.
The galley is ranged along the port side outboard of the passageway. Well-designed for work at sea, it affords 6′ of counter space as well as good light and air. The saloon makes use of the boats beam with wide shelves extending out to the hull sides behind the settees. Big areas of convenient stowage plus an open feel are the advantages. Hull ports provide light plus a view. The forward cabin has two hanging lockers. Locker fronts throughout are caned. Interior finish is a Beneteau hallmark. Few production boats offer the same amount and quality of lustrous, well- worked wood below. We wonder about the living in a show room feel of life aboard, but were not complaining!
Construction
Most Beneteaus are built using interior liners. The Oceanis 36 hulls are hand-laid in a female mold using vinylester resin in the skin of the laminate to combat osmosis and polyester resin in the rest of the laminate. The company says no more about laminate schedules. Compared to resin transfer methods such as SCRIMP, which improve glass-to-resin ratios (yielding lighter, stronger hulls), hand lay-ups now are pretty ordinary.
While still in the mold, the hull is reinforced with a full-length fiberglass grid structure. Extending in most areas to a foot above the waterline, the grid is a complex system of athwartships and longitudinal molded stringers and floors that stabilize the hull and distribute rig loads and working strains. It incorporates molded-in, stainless steel chainplate tie-downs, engine bed, water tanks and sump. The liner is made of woven plus unidirectional glass and polyester resin and is bonded over much of its surface to the hull. The success of the method depends on the precision and strength of the bond. Beneteau has been building boats this way since the late 70s. Its track record is good.
One thing that has changed is the rudder assembly. It is a composite rudderstock (made of unidirectional glass and vinylester resin) wound with a continuous filament of unidirectional glass (and polyester resin) to form an integral shaft/blade. The stainless/fiberglass amalgams that it replaces were costlier and trouble-prone. The composite shaft has a breaking strength nearly three times greater than the stainless. However, a number of Beneteau owners complain about play in their steering systems. One owner, who had a new bearing plate installed (at no charge by Beneteau) between the top of the shaft tube and the quadrant, said that Beneteau fixed the problem just about completely. The composite shaft also eliminates the widespread problem of corrosion inside the rudder, usually where the rudderstock is welded to the webs.
End-grain balsa forms the core for the deck. Beneteau does the right thing in terms of using solid glass wherever hardware is attached, but, as is true with most boats, you may face a substantial chore to mount additional deck gear correctly.
The deck is placed atop an inward-turning hull flange. The joint is bonded with space age polyurethane glue and mechanically fastened through the teak toerail with screws. There is no fail-safe aspect to the design; it depends on care, precision, and experience (as well as the properties of the adhesive.) Here again, Beneteaus history is good and its five year (limited) hull warranty is comforting.
The keel is iron, which re- quires an epoxy treatment to prevent corrosion. We prefer lead, which is denser and non-corrosive, and, of course, more expensive. Dont forget that Beneteau, like Hunter and Catalina, is highly value conscious.
A furling mainsail and genoa are standard. Beneteau used to use Isofurl, but after some problems in Europe last year with some Isofurl headsail furlers failing (a number of rigs fall down, all in Europe) a recall was issued. The Isofurl headsail furlers were replaced with Facnor, another French vendor not widely known in this country.
Performance?Most boats are at their worst beating in light to moderate air and a seaway. In these conditions, we found Oceanis worse than most. She gets almost all of her power from her headsail, and the rail-mounted genoa car tracks don’t allow tight sheeting angles. The parasitic drag of a winged keel is most insidious in these conditions and the roller-furling main isn’t big enough (or shapeable enough) to be much help. From here, things get better. More breeze provides more power and puts less of a premium on the efficiency of the overall rig.
The Oceanis is beamy. This gives her fine initial stability. Her ballast/displacement ratio is only 31%, however. That means that once she starts to heel her righting moment drops sharply-she becomes tender. Reefing is an easy solution, but, especially with the standard (too full when rolled part way) headsail, it didnt prove to be a good one. The boat is not meant to be raced nor is she designed to supply that last 10% of optimal upwind speed.
Off the wind, the 36 is a chunky rocket. Her relatively clean underbody, good initial stability, fine entry, long waterline, and graceful exit help her click off the passagemaking miles very quickly. Even when she heels in a puff and buries a hip, she will answer to her deep rudder rather than spinning out.
Under power, the 27-hp. Yanmar diesel pushed her easily to hull speed with plenty of throttle in reserve. Backing to starboard is hard until she gets moving. She climbs to port right away in reverse (with a three-bladed prop) but will steer once she develops even a small amount of stern way.
Conclusions
For people under 6 feet, the Oceanis 36CC offers more living space than any boat weve seen of comparable size. The accommodations are not only roomy but attractive, practical, and functional-either for cruising or for living aboard. She goes to weather better than most similar boats, but she falls short of being a good upwind performer. She reaches and runs with good quickness.
In some ways, Beneteau can offer more product for less money than many of its competitors, especially in the area of finish and outfitting. The breadth of its dealer network and the depth of its building history are additional plusses. That, and the fact that there arent many other new boats quite like the Oceanis 36CC, make it a new boat to consider.
Base price is $126,500. For comparison, a Hunter 376 starts at about $120,000 and a Catalina 36MKII at about $107,000.
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Late review…. Didn’t Beneteau stop making these in 2003?
Beneteau probably has production dates on their website. We have several decades of boat reviews on the site. Thanks for the heads up, I’ll have someone go through it and try to bring it up to date.
Dear Darrell,
I recently posted this on a sailing forum recently. You obviously know a lot about this boat, perhaps you can help?
Davits on 1998 Beneteau Oceanis 36c … Hey everyone. I’m trying to understand the load capacity for the davits that are installed on my 1998 Beneteau Oceanis 36cc. I.e how much weight can the davits hold?
I have checked inside the boat and it appears that the davits are original from the factory build as the starboard davit bolts and backing plate are mounded into the fiberglass.
There are no markings (make/model#) on the davits etc so I’m not sure who built them (Beneteau or another company for Beneteau)
Does anyone have this capacity info or suggestions on how to figure it out?
Many thanks
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Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau
The oceanis 36 cc beneteau is a 36.42ft masthead sloop designed by berret racoupeau yacht design and built in fiberglass by beneteau between 1998 and 2002..
The Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau is a light sailboat which is a good performer. It is reasonably stable / stiff and has a low righting capability if capsized. It is best suited as a coastal cruiser. The fuel capacity is originally small. There is a good water supply range.
Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau for sale elsewhere on the web:
Main features
Model | Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau | ||
Length | 36.42 ft | ||
Beam | 12.50 ft | ||
Draft | 5 ft | ||
Country | France (Europe) | ||
Estimated price | $ 0 | ?? |
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Sail area / displ. | 18.09 | ||
Ballast / displ. | 0 % | ||
Displ. / length | 195.19 | ||
Comfort ratio | 21.61 | ||
Capsize | 2.12 |
Hull type | Monohull wing keel | ||
Construction | Fiberglass | ||
Waterline length | 31.16 ft | ||
Maximum draft | 5 ft | ||
Displacement | 13228 lbs | ||
Ballast | 0 lbs | ||
Hull speed | 7.48 knots |
We help you build your own hydraulic steering system - Lecomble & Schmitt
Rigging | Masthead Sloop | ||
Sail area (100%) | 630 sq.ft | ||
Air draft | 0 ft | ?? | |
Sail area fore | 0 sq.ft | ?? | |
Sail area main | 0 sq.ft | ?? | |
I | 0 ft | ?? | |
J | 0 ft | ?? | |
P | 0 ft | ?? | |
E | 0 ft | ?? |
Nb engines | 1 | ||
Total power | 28 HP | ||
Fuel capacity | 40 gals |
Accommodations
Water capacity | 110 gals | ||
Headroom | 0 ft | ||
Nb of cabins | 0 | ||
Nb of berths | 0 | ||
Nb heads | 0 |
Builder data
Builder | Beneteau | ||
Designer | Berret Racoupeau Yacht Design | ||
First built | 1998 | ||
Last built | 2002 | ||
Number built | 0 | ?? |
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Océanis 36 CC
Sailboat specifications.
- Last update: 30th March 2020
Océanis 36 CC's main features
Océanis 36 cc's main dimensions, océanis 36 cc's rig and sails, océanis 36 cc's performances, océanis 36 cc's auxiliary engine, océanis 36 cc's accommodations and layout.
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Beneteau 36.7
Beneteau 36.7 is a 36 ′ 1 ″ / 11 m monohull sailboat designed by Farr Yacht Design and built by Beneteau starting in 2002.
Rig and Sails
Auxilary power, accomodations, calculations.
The theoretical maximum speed that a displacement hull can move efficiently through the water is determined by it's waterline length and displacement. It may be unable to reach this speed if the boat is underpowered or heavily loaded, though it may exceed this speed given enough power. Read more.
Classic hull speed formula:
Hull Speed = 1.34 x √LWL
Max Speed/Length ratio = 8.26 ÷ Displacement/Length ratio .311 Hull Speed = Max Speed/Length ratio x √LWL
Sail Area / Displacement Ratio
A measure of the power of the sails relative to the weight of the boat. The higher the number, the higher the performance, but the harder the boat will be to handle. This ratio is a "non-dimensional" value that facilitates comparisons between boats of different types and sizes. Read more.
SA/D = SA ÷ (D ÷ 64) 2/3
- SA : Sail area in square feet, derived by adding the mainsail area to 100% of the foretriangle area (the lateral area above the deck between the mast and the forestay).
- D : Displacement in pounds.
Ballast / Displacement Ratio
A measure of the stability of a boat's hull that suggests how well a monohull will stand up to its sails. The ballast displacement ratio indicates how much of the weight of a boat is placed for maximum stability against capsizing and is an indicator of stiffness and resistance to capsize.
Ballast / Displacement * 100
Displacement / Length Ratio
A measure of the weight of the boat relative to it's length at the waterline. The higher a boat’s D/L ratio, the more easily it will carry a load and the more comfortable its motion will be. The lower a boat's ratio is, the less power it takes to drive the boat to its nominal hull speed or beyond. Read more.
D/L = (D ÷ 2240) ÷ (0.01 x LWL)³
- D: Displacement of the boat in pounds.
- LWL: Waterline length in feet
Comfort Ratio
This ratio assess how quickly and abruptly a boat’s hull reacts to waves in a significant seaway, these being the elements of a boat’s motion most likely to cause seasickness. Read more.
Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam 1.33 )
- D: Displacement of the boat in pounds
- LOA: Length overall in feet
- Beam: Width of boat at the widest point in feet
Capsize Screening Formula
This formula attempts to indicate whether a given boat might be too wide and light to readily right itself after being overturned in extreme conditions. Read more.
CSV = Beam ÷ ³√(D / 64)
Most often called FIRST 36.7 (BENETEAU). See FIRST 36.7 (BENETEAU). Shallow draft version: 5.2’/1.58m.
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The Clipper 361 is a powerful and seafaring sail boat which will take you wherever you wish, in the best possible conditions. Innovative in terms of sailing pleasure and comfort, the Oceanis Clipper 361 will also captivate you with the thoroughness of its construction, a guarantee of many years of unforgettable cruises.
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40 to 50 indicates a heavy bluewater boat; over 50 indicates an extremely heavy bluewater boat. Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam^1.33), where displacement is expressed in pounds, and length is expressed in feet. Capsize Screening Formula (CSF): Designed to determine if a boat has blue water capability.
The BENETEAU First 36 was designed to bridge the gap between high-tech development in the world of racing and mainstream racer-cruisers. Even the standard version of First 36 will fully plane in a moderate breeze. However, this by itself was not the main challenge for the design and production teams. For 40 years, the Firsts were successfully hitting the elusive sweet spot between comfort ...
The new Beneteau First 36 that debuted at Annapolis last fall checks all these boxes, and more. Enough that we here at SAIL happily anointed it one of our 2023 Top 10 Best Boats winners. This is a remarkably versatile craft. For a mass-production boat, it is quite light but also very strong, with a purely race-boat-quality build regimen.
The Beneteau giant, though, employs a mere 1,800 people. It spans the globe but has kept sailors in the company loop, retained most customers as friends, and been responsive to market realities. It would be hard to confuse Beneteau chairwoman Annette Beneteau Roux with Henry Ford, and the Oceanis 36 is hardly a cruising Volkswagen.
The First 36 features a traditional three-cabin layout. To maximize living space in the saloon, the bathroom footprint is minimized, using an innovative foldable sink. The extra space makes room for a navigation table/onboard office. Another innovation standing out in the saloon is the standalone fridge island.
Beneteau First 36 - Speed made easy. Welcome to the latest model in our new breed of high-performance cruiser-racers. With a weight of 4,8 tons and an upwind sail area of 80 square meters, the new First 36 simply presents a different sailing experience. Actually, we believe this is the first time a mainstream-production boat with full-cruising ...
The Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau is a 36.42ft masthead sloop designed by Berret Racoupeau Yacht Design and built in fiberglass by Beneteau between 1998 and 2002. The Oceanis 36 cc Beneteau is a light sailboat which is a good performer. It is reasonably stable / stiff and has a low righting capability if capsized.
Sailboat specifications. Last update: 30th March 2020. The Océanis 36 CC is a 35'5" (10.8m) cruising sailboat designed by Berret Racoupeau Yachts Design (France). She was built between 1996 and 2003 by Bénéteau (France).
Beneteau Oceanis 36 CC is a 36′ 5″ / 11.1 m monohull sailboat designed by Berret-Racoupeau and built by Beneteau between 1998 and 2002. ... The lower a boat's ratio is, the less power it takes to drive the boat to its nominal hull speed or beyond. Read more. Formula. D/L = (D ÷ 2240) ÷ (0.01 x LWL)³ D: Displacement of the boat in pounds ...
Beneteau 36.7 is a 36′ 1″ / 11 m monohull sailboat designed by Farr Yacht Design and built by Beneteau starting in 2002. ... The lower a boat's ratio is, the less power it takes to drive the boat to its nominal hull speed or beyond. Read more. Formula. D/L = (D ÷ 2240) ÷ (0.01 x LWL)³ D: Displacement of the boat in pounds. LWL: Waterline ...
40 to 50 indicates a heavy bluewater boat; over 50 indicates an extremely heavy bluewater boat. Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam^1.33), where displacement is expressed in pounds, and length is expressed in feet. Capsize Screening Formula (CSF): Designed to determine if a boat has blue water capability.
The new First 36.7 holds the same delights in store that lovers of First discovered : character, style, performance and all the equipment of a true 36' racer, plus easy live-aboard comfort… pure sensations. An effective deck plan, a large ergonomic cockpit perfect for genoa trimmers, mainsheet-trim position tucked behind the helm and a deep lead keel.
Find Beneteau First 36 boats for sale in your area & across the world on YachtWorld. Offering the best selection of Beneteau boats to choose from. ... 2023 Beneteau First 36. Request price. RCR Yachts, Cleveland | Cleveland, Ohio. Request Info; In-Stock; 2023 Beneteau First 36. US$259,521. US $1,972/mo. Burin Boats | Portorož, Slovenia.
Sailboat data directory for sailboats manufacturer or named Beneteau. Follow the provided links for additional sailboat data, parts and rigging specs. Sailboat Data directory for over 8,000 sailboat designs and manufacturers. Direct access to halyards lengths, recommended sail areas, mainsail cover styles, standing rigging fittings, and lots ...
Welcome to the latest model in our new breed of high-performance cruiser-racers. With a weight of 4,8 tons and an upwind sail area of 80 square meters, the new First 36 simply presents a different sailing experience. Actually, we believe this is the first time a mainstream-production boat with full-cruising facilities, a mid-market price tag and the full support of a worldwide dealer network ...
40 to 50 indicates a heavy bluewater boat; over 50 indicates an extremely heavy bluewater boat. Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam^1.33), where displacement is expressed in pounds, and length is expressed in feet. Capsize Screening Formula (CSF): Designed to determine if a boat has blue water capability.
Benjamin Beneteau, shipwright, founded the Beneteau boatyard at Croix-de-Vie, France to build sailing trawlers. In 1964 Annette Beneteau Roux and her brother, Andre, granddaughter and grandson to Benjamin, diversified the company with the introduction of fiberglass sailing yachts. With the introduction of the FLETAN and the GUPPY, Beneteau took part in the 1965 Paris Boat Show for the first ...
40 to 50 indicates a heavy bluewater boat; over 50 indicates an extremely heavy bluewater boat. Comfort ratio = D ÷ (.65 x (.7 LWL + .3 LOA) x Beam^1.33), where displacement is expressed in pounds, and length is expressed in feet. Capsize Screening Formula (CSF): Designed to determine if a boat has blue water capability.
Description. The Clipper 361 is a powerful and seafaring sail boat which will take you wherever you wish, in the best possible conditions. Innovative in terms of sailing pleasure and comfort, the Oceanis Clipper 361 will also captivate you with the thoroughness of its construction, a guarantee of many years of unforgettable cruises.
Most often called FIRST 36.7 (BENETEAU). See FIRST 36.7 (BENETEAU). Shallow draft version: 5.2'/1.58m. Sailboat Forum. View All Topics: ... A Ballast/Displacement ratio of 40 or more translates into a stiffer, more powerful boat that will be better able to stand up to the wind. Bal./Disp = ballast (lbs)/ displacement (lbs)*100