Home/ Boats/ Us Yachts - Bayliner/ Us 29/ Performance
Performance

Us 29 Performance

How the Us 29 performs on the water — racing handicap, sail-carrying power, stability and comfort.

+ Add to Compare

The Us 29 is moderately powered for comfortable coastal cruising, with a quick, snappy motion best suited to day sailing.

Hull Speed

The theoretical displacement-mode speed limit — determined by waterline length, not engine or sail power.

6.3 kts
A displacement hull pushes a bow wave whose speed is limited by the waterline length. With a waterline of 22.4′, the Us 29 tops out around 6.3 knots in displacement mode — after that, the bow wave outruns the hull and resistance climbs steeply.
1.34 × √22.4′ LWL = 6.3 kts

Performance Ratios

Racing handicap, sail-carrying power, stability and comfort — and what each one actually tells you about a day on the water.

SA / Displacement
17.3
Moderate sail power — a capable coastal cruiser, not overpowered.
Comfort Ratio
19.9
Quick, snappy motion — better for day sails and racing than long passages.
Capsize Screening
2.15
Above the 2.0 offshore threshold — best suited for coastal and protected waters.
Hull Speed
6.3kts
S# (Speed Number)
2.0
Pounds/Inch Immersion
821lbs
Weight needed to sink the hull one inch — loading sensitivity.

Motion & Offshore Suitability

Two ratios that matter most when you're planning passages — how the boat feels in a seaway, and whether the hull geometry is suitable for open ocean.

Comfort Ratio
19.9
Quick, snappy motion — better for day sails and racing than long passages.
Under 20 — Snappy, racing motion
20–30 — Acceptable coastal
30–40 — Good offshore comfort
Over 40 — Very comfortable offshore
Capsize Screening Formula
2.15
Above the 2.0 offshore threshold — best suited for coastal and protected waters.
Under 2.0 — Acceptable for offshore
Over 2.0 — Coastal / protected waters

PHRF Fleet Position

Where the Us 29 sits on the PHRF handicap spectrum — lower numbers mean faster boats.

Racer 0–90
Cruiser/Racer 90–150
Cruiser 150–210
Frers 30 132s/nm
Seidelmann 295 183s/nm
Lancer 30 2 192s/nm
Farallon 29 204s/nm

Estimated Speed by Wind

Rough boat speed estimates at different true wind speeds and points of sail — derived from hull speed, SA/D, and displacement, not measured polars.

Point of Sail 6 kts TWS 10 kts TWS 15 kts TWS 20 kts TWS
Close-hauled40–50° 2.5 3.2 3.6 3.8
Close Reach60° 3.1 3.9 4.4 4.5
Beam Reach90° 3.8 4.8 5.3 5.6
Broad Reach120–135° 3.5 4.4 4.9 5.1
Run150–180° 2.8 3.5 3.9 4.1
These are simplified estimates based on hull speed (6.3 kts), SA/D (17.3), and empirical efficiency curves — not instrument-measured polars. Real-world speed varies with sea state, bottom condition, sail trim, and current. Speeds in gold approach hull speed; bold gold means near or at hull speed.

Wind Range & Comfort Envelope

Estimated wind ranges for comfortable sailing on the Us 29 — based on sail area, ballast, and displacement characteristics.

Ghost
Sweet Spot
Reef
Heavy
0–7 kts 7–20 kts 20–28 kts 28+ kts
Ghosting
0–7 kts
Light air, motor-sailing likely. Need patience and a light genoa.
Sweet Spot
7–20 kts
Comfortable under full sail. Best speed-to-comfort ratio.
Time to Reef
20–28 kts
Time to shorten sail. Reef the main, swap to a working jib.
Heavy Weather
28+ kts
Storm conditions. Storm jib or bare poles. Seek shelter if coastal.

How It Compares

Side-by-side with the boats most often cross-shopped against the Us 29.

Us 29 Cc 29 Farallon 29 Frers 30 Lancer 30 2 Seidelmann 295
Dimensions
LOA 29.5 29.6 29.5 29.5 29.5 29.4
LWL 22.4 23.6 22.5 26.0 22.5 24.4
Beam 10.3 10.3 9.4 10.9 9.8 10.2
Displacement 7 7 8 6 7 7
Ballast 2 2 3 2 3 3
Sail Area 395 422 406 458 360 408
Performance
PHRF 204 132 192 183
SA/Disp 17.3 17.7 15.8 20.3 15.8 17.6
Bal/Disp 36.0 45.1 42.9 44.4
Comfort 19.9 20.4 26.7 16.3 21.0 19.6
Capsize 2.15 2.11 1.86 2.30 2.06 2.11
Hull Speed 6.3 6.5 6.4 6.8 6.4 6.6