Tamiya Yahama Round: The World Yacht Manual
As you flip through the pages, you aren't just learning how to glue the stanchions or rig the standing lines. You are being educated on the realities of single-handed sailing. The most fascinating page in the manual isn't the painting guide. It is the cutaway illustration of the cabin .
If you ever find a battered copy of the Tamiya Yamaha Round the World Yacht manual at a garage sale—buy it. Even if the plastic is missing.
The manual teaches you why the shrouds are tensioned. It explains the difference between a genoa and a mainsail in aerodynamic terms. For a child in a landlocked city, this manual was a gateway drug to meteorology and naval architecture. Look closely at the last page. You will see the deck layout, and drawn in fine ink is the sextant and the chronometer . Tamiya Yahama Round The World Yacht Manual
The subject is the Yamaha 33 , a real yacht designed by the legendary Japanese firm. In 1976, sailor took this exact vessel and sailed it 28,000 miles around the globe. Tamiya didn't just model the boat; they modeled the expedition .
Here, Tamiya shows you where the sailor sleeps, where the engine sits, and—most morbidly—where he stores his food. The manual details the caloric intake required to survive the Southern Ocean. It shows you the desalinator, the emergency beacon, and the sea anchor. As you flip through the pages, you aren't
You are a teenager at your hobby desk, using liquid cement that smells like brain damage, and suddenly you are contemplating the logistics of boiling water in a Force 10 gale. That is heavy lifting for a plastic kit. Most boat manuals gloss over the rigging. They say, "Attach line A to hook B." Tamiya’s R-T-W manual goes a step further. It includes diagrams of low-pressure systems and trade winds .
When you display this model on your shelf, you aren't just looking at a boat. You are looking at the 28,000 miles printed on those instruction sheets. You see the black squall lines, the lonely night watches, and the quiet sunrise in the Indian Ocean. It is the cutaway illustration of the cabin
And you will realize that Tamiya wasn't just selling a model. They were selling a dream of absolute freedom, held together with a little bit of polystyrene cement.
Sit down and read it. You will learn about wind shear, starvation rations, and the specific tensile strength of Dacron rope. You will learn that building a model isn't about the destination; it’s about the journey the instructions take you on.
For many kids (and let’s be honest, adults who never grew up), the was the holy grail of static display kits. But unlike a tank or a fighter jet, this model promised something ethereal: the romance of the open ocean, the science of the wind, and the solitude of a solo circumnavigation.