Design No. 1113

Aline IV

Auxiliary Cutter

Design 1113 is an Auxiliary Cutter recorded in the Alfred Mylne archive. The design bears the original name Aline IV. One drawing survives in the archive for this design. Further details regarding construction, dimensions, rig specification, and commissioning remain incomplete in available records.

Original Drawings · 1 sheet

Purchase high-res drawings

Dimensions

LOA14.5 m / 48 ft
LOD12.2 m / 40 ft
LWL8.5 m / 28 ft
Beam2.7 m / 9 ft
Draft1.8 m / 6 ft

Notes

Marked, '10 tons Aux. Cutter'.

Historical Context

Alfred Mylne (1868–1960) was a Scottish naval architect whose practice spanned more than seventy years. His design output encompassed yachts across numerous classes and types, from small cruising vessels to substantial ocean-going designs. The Auxiliary Cutter type emerged during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as a practical evolution of pure sailing design, incorporating auxiliary steam or motor propulsion. This enabled owners greater operational flexibility whilst retaining the sailing qualities valued in yacht design of the period.