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Beneteau 393

The new 393 benefits from big-company protocols in the production process. The basic design is nothing radical, but the layout and details incorporate a lot of owner feedback.

Beneteau is one of the few builders (along with perhaps Catalina, Hunter, and its own corporate cousin, Jeanneau) whose volume of production can generate significant “economies of scale.” Boatbuilding is not, of course, like automobile building or most other assembly-line processes. Boats and the way that they go together are complex; there’s more to launching a successful sailboat than buying parts in quantity and piecing them together. Nevertheless, when you look at a new boat like Beneteau’s recently introduced 393 you can see how the size, reach, and clout of the parent company can pay off.

Our review of the Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 43 two months ago made the same point: Big, established, boatbuilders with meticulously organized production systems can afford to work out the kinks without passing along too many of the costs to buyers. They have a system, and it works.

Beneteau 393

Founded in 1884, Beneteau originally built fishing boats for the Bay of Biscay. Still a family-run concern, it turned to yachts and has built sailboats throughout most of the 20th century. For more than a decade now it has been building boats onboth sides of the Atlantic. (There’s a large facility in Marion, SC.)

Without doubt, the biggest recent company move was the acquisition of French rival Jeanneau. Though the two builders continue to offer separate lines, taken together they produce more auxiliary sailboats than anyone else in the world. Thus one of the benefits of “economies of scale”-the Beneteau/Jeanneau combination can drive a pretty good bargain on materials, hardware, sails, and so on.

All of which is a simple (and simplistic) explanation of why Beneteau can sell an attractive, commodious new cruiser like the 393 for a base price of under $140,000. Even then, it’s not like Henry Ford’s color option list for the Model T (you could have any color you wanted, as long as it was black): While the 393’s styling, playpen cockpit, and most of the standard parts can’t be customized on a whim, there are a couple of choices in accommodations that will extend the range of the boat’s appeal considerably.

Getting back to being big… Beneteau is in a unique position (selling to a worldwide market, supplying boats to dozens of charter companies, and introducing new models at a pace virtually unequalled in the industry) to collect feedback. The company has maintained its popularity by paying close attention to what customers want. As with politicians and constituents in a democracy, this can be good and bad.

According to Wayne Burdick, President of Beneteau USA, there have been 72 copies of the 393 ordered since the boat was introduced just last year. Volume like that means commissions, and commissions make naval architects happy. That makes working with Beneteau hard to resist. The designers who have done so are distinguished-the Groupe Finot and Bruce Farr notable among them. Since the late ’80s, however, the most influential designers in the Beneteau camp have been Jean Berret and his partner, Olivier Racoupeau. The two have had a lot to do with the establish-ment of the First (racer/cruiser) line. These “dual purpose” boats have been notably popular. Both designers have superb credentials in the grand prix arena. Berret, for instance, designed the Beneteau One Ton that won the Admiral’s Cup in 1987 and virtually got Beneteau into the racing game.

Throughout the ’90s Beneteau has also sold cruisers-the Oceanis line.These have no racing pretensions.

Rather they emphasize “being in touch with the sea.” They have been the leaders in evolving the molded, sleek, straight-sheer look that we’ve come to call “Euro.” They are remarkable, too, for their light, room, space, and comfort. When swim platforms were new, they had open transoms complete with outdoor showers. Says Wayne Burdick, “When you think of the dark, deep, dank caves that we used to cruise in and look at how open, light, and bright boats are today, you have to credit a lot of that change to the Oceanis line.”

As new models have come on line, Beneteau has sought to improve their performance. As finkeeled/balanced rudder boats the Oceani are lively in maneuvering and can record good passage times. However, acceleration, sail-carrying power, and weatherliness have not generally been their strongpoints.

Masters of working within rating rules, of wringing speed from compromises and limitations, Berret and Racoupeau have consistently whittled away in hopes of making each new Oceanis a better performer.

Accommodations

First and foremost, the 393 is roomy. You can’t help but notice the legroom, elbow room, generous seat backs, and open space in the cockpit. The walk-through coaming aft creates a good combination of openness and security. While the well is a bit too wide to brace across (and only one of the three cockpit table versions offered provides a footbrace) it’s hard to find any other quibble- sight lines are good, protection is stout, surfaces are contoured for comfort, and space is carved out around the winches to let you work them efficiently. It’s a big, comfortable, efficient, livable, modern cockpit. (If someone could figure out how to make mainsheet and traveller controls operable by the helmsman, though, it would make shorthanded sailing more realistic.)

She’s also roomy below. Headroom in the after part of the saloon approaches 6′ 6″. Light adds to the open feel, thanks mostly to the three overhead deck-windows (which come with sunshades).

Beneteau 393 Cabin Layout

There are two different interior configurations, a two-cabin version that accentuates privacy and yields a deep cockpit locker; and a three cabin version that offers two quarter cabins aft. The two-cabin layout has the galley in a traditional portside nook next to the companionway, with a settee to starboard opposite the dining area; the tri-cabin set-up removes the facing settee and puts the galley there in a linear arrangement with an array of finished cabinets and drawer stowage. “More and more people want more and more stowage,” says Burdick, “so we’re giving it to them.”

There are advantages and disadvantages to both arrangements. In most cases we’d counsel the sacrifice of bunks in order to make room for more “working” areas. In this case, though, the trade-offs are too close to call. The tri-cabin version has a dedicated nav station where the two-cabin version has none. It has an extra hanging locker to port, but lacks the good cockpit locker. The linear galley seems to us more intrusive, less convivial, and less safe in a seaway than the U-shaped version. That layout also suffers from a lack of support for moving around below in a seaway; the more traditional layout is “narrower” and would offer better security. Maybe the cabin choice depends on how many kids or friends you sail with, or whether you own a charter company.

Beneteau has always done a good job with interior wood. Far from seeming “knocked off” or mass produced, the furniture, cabinetry, and trim of the 393 live up to custom standards of fit, precision, and harmony. That’s because the company has purchased wood widely (and wisely) and because its wood shop is a two-acre masterpiece of computer controlled milling, routing, spraying, and fitting. Aside from the somewhat unsettling impression of living inside a grand piano instead of a boat, the result is impeccable.

The 393 offers a great deal of light and air. The decklights are the biggest light source, but the boat has six house ports, six hull ports, and seven overhead hatches, plus two cockpit ports. There’s plenty of cross ventilation to make forecabins and quartercabins habitable.

The 393’s nav station (in the three cabin layout) is big and well-designed for comfort. There’s an argument that with so much navigating being done in the cockpit these days, especially on shorthanded boats, the need for a good nav table is diminished, but we don’t think so. It may not need to be big enough to spread out a full-sized chart, but a cruising sailor still needs a desk, even if its just a surface for a notebook computer.

Beneteau 393

Hanging lockers are bigger and better (cedar-lined) than average, and there are even a few drawers. The overhead (an amalgam of some fiberglass, some fabric, and some wood) is attractive and (albeit with difficulty) removable. “Condensation is never a problem with our boats,” Burdick says. After sailing one dry through a drippy week in Ireland we can agree.

Access to the 40-hp Westerbeke diesel is superb. From beneath the companionway or via either quarter cabin you can attack it all. Foam insulation is a cut above industry standards and the faint humming of the monster below while we were underway suggested that it has been deployed well. Tankage (35 gallons fuel and 130 gallons water) doesn’t encourage world-girdling, but it’s substantial for a boat like this one.

A shallow bilge is an unfortunate by-product of a relatively flat-bottomed design. This one at least has a deep sump that should keep water from sloshing into vital areas below.

The galley is a modern marvel, with good handholds, safety bar, ventilated cabinet fronts, pot stowage, garbage cuddy, and a standard two-burner propane range/oven.

Construction

Beneteau has been building boats of solid glass reinforced with a fiberglass structural grid for at least 20 years. The method has been refined in light of material changes and streamlined in places for better efficiencies, but it remains essentially the same process that has yielded every First, Oceanis, and (now that the company has reverted simply to its own name to designate its boats) modern Beneteau.

These boats are clearly and cleverly “designed to be built,” using the minimum possible time and labor. As we’ve pointed out, in a production process this big and efficient, those can be considered good qualities. You might question the weight, quality, and composition of the hull laminate. You might theorize that there’s a weak point at the bond between hull and liner. You might focus on the fact that all-around taping of structural bulkheads demands excellent quality control. You might want a simpler, more-robust anchor for the 393’s chainplates. But at every turn your analysis butts up against the intended uses of the boat, which in this case should mean extended coastal cruising, and the enviable track record of durability racked up by hundreds of its cousins in the charter trade.

The hull/deck joint is an example of the sort of technique that is quick but not necessarily dirty. An inward turning flange receives the deck. Bedded on a rim of “5200-like” sealant, the deck (balsa-cored except where it receives hardware, and along its outer rim) is bolted through the flange in the area of chocks, stanchions, and cleats. Then machine screws on 6-inch centers tack down the remainder. The joint’s integrity is ensured by “chemical bond, plus mechanical, plus efficiency in meeting shear loads,” says Burdick.

While lead is the ballast of choice throughout most of the industry, Beneteau generally uses cast iron, as they do on this boat. Lead is denser by far than iron, and so will make for a much heavier keel in the same area and volume (or can be smaller to achieve similar weight). Lead, however, will also cost almost twice as much.

While economy may be Beneteau’s main reason for using iron keels, Burdick points to another advantage: “The keel root [where fin meets hull] is a significant source of turbulence. You reduce that drag by making the foil as thin as possible at that point. That’s much easier to do with cast iron.”

In any case, for obvious reasons, coverings and coatings on iron keels must be scrupulously maintained to make sure the ferrous metal never meets the watery medium directly.

Like the iron-keeled Oceanis line that have come before, the 393 depends less on ballast (at a minimal ballast/displacement ratio of 31 percent) than on shape (with a substantial 13′ 1″ beam) for stability. Were she to sport a similarly sized fin made of lead, it would lower hercenter of gravity (a positive move in terms of stability), but it would make her an appreciably heavier, costlier boat, with a “dead weight” liability to overcome in her performance.

Also, were Berret and Racoupeau to pare down the size of her keel by using lead, it would diminish lateral plane and hurt upwind performance.

Her mast is deck-stepped. Here, we believe, the company probably listened too closely to people who said they didn’t want a hole in the roof and a tree trunk in the saloon. The interior compression post is pretty, and the weldment at the top that accepts though-bolts to fasten on deck hardware is clever-but we think a boat this size should have a keel-stepped mast. As it is, the rig requires a babystay to help it stay in column.

Beneath the grid the keel is affixed (sealant and machined-in bolts) in a leakproof but removable bond.

Performance

To date the Oceanis performance evolution has been pretty straightforward. Each new boat has been (relatively speaking) a bit lighter, and each new sailplan has been proportionally larger. Thus horsepower to weight (sail area/displacement) characteristics, the “muscles” of performance under sail, have been groomed and refined over the years. ”

The 393 replaced the Oceanis 381,” says Burdick, “and you can note the same sort of improvement [from a SA/D of 14.45 to a more robust 16]. But these numbers aren’t all there is to performance. The 393 was given a substantially longer waterline [35′ 1″ as opposed to 32′ 10″]. That provides a more open ended speed potential that can boost passage times. Those are the numbers that sailors can really appreciate.”

Berret and Racoupeau have made some other changes. The 393 is very beamy for her size. The 381 was a beamy 12′ 11″ wide; the 393 pushes that out to 13′ 1″. Taking a page from today’s long-distance racers, the designers have made their own modest foray into the area of “beam for speed.” The 393 certainly benefits from her above-average volume when it comes to accommodations and payload, but hers is also a shape designed to enhance performance rather than weigh it down. The initial stability that she achieves via beam means that she needs less ballast. Her powerful after sections permit faired waterlines and flattened buttocks that minimize wavemaking turbulence. By easing the turn of the bilge her designers gave her semi-circular sectional shapes that cut down on parasitic drag (and improve light-air performance).

LOA: 39′ 3″

LWL: 35′ 1″

Beam: 13′ 1″

Draft (standard) 5′ 1″

Draft (deep keel) 6′ 3″

Displacement: 17,152 lbs.

Ballast: 5,357 lbs.

Fuel: 35 gallons

Water: 131 gallons

SA: 643 sq. ft.

D/L ratio: 178

SA/D ratio: 16.0

Auxiliary: 40-hp Westerbeke

The proof is in the pudding. On a sail after the Newport Boat Show last fall, Wayne Burdick offered us the wheel and we sailed close-hauled into a 12-knot southeaster heading past Ft. Adams toward open water. We noted that she seemed at least as close-winded as the boats around us. Pinching her up to around 30 degrees apparent wind angle caused her to skate off to leeward, but when we sailed full and by (at something closer to 40 degrees) she was a different boat-balanced and weatherly. We doubted that punching through chop would be a strongpoint, but in this relatively protected water the 393 went upwind with power and efficiency. Her balanced spade rudder made tacking (consistently inside 85 degrees) a pleasure. When we cracked off to test her stability it was remarkably hard to get the foils to ventilate. The steering control created by her powerful after sections and deep rudder was excellent.

Reaching and running are what the 393 was made for. A conventional poled spinnaker would add cruising versatility and the standard mastfurling mainsail lacks the effective area of a conventional main (now offered as the optional “classic”), but these quarrels have more to do with the modern cruiser in general than with the 393 specifically.

Conclusions

For cruising in comfort and sailing with ease it’s hard to top modern designs like the 393. Openness, creature comfort, and smooth-running systems put boats like these well ahead of the “narrow, dark, cavelike” designs of just a few years ago. However, if your need is to claw off a lee shore in a gale, to go where the waves are bigger than you are, or to cast off with “anything goes” readiness, these new coastal cruising designs aren’t as good as the old.

That’s not to say that the 393 can’t go far afield, but if we were doing it, we’d choose the deep-keel option for better lift, the “classic” mainsail arrangement-and we’d dote on the rig and all its terminals.

Beneteau has harnessed its design and purchasing resources to produce a boat that combines performance and comfort in an attractive package. Designed in large part according to the demands of customers to fit the cruising that they actually do, it’s a triumph of stowage, light, air, and space, and is gratifying to sail.

Despite focus groups and styling details, despite corporate bigness, and the difficulties inherent in making a good thing better, it seems to us that the company has again brought an honest boat to market.

Beneteau USA, 24 North Market

St., Suite 201, Charleston, SC

29401; 843/805-5000.

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Very informative work that addressed many of the questions I had about Beneteau and this model specifically. Well done

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Beneteau Cyclades 39.3

Beneteau Cyclades 39.3 is a 39 ′ 3 ″ / 12 m monohull sailboat designed by Berret-Racoupeau and built by Beneteau starting in 2007.

Drawing of Beneteau Cyclades 39.3

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)

Probably based on the earlier BENETEAU 393/OCEANIS 393. CYCLADES was a brand sold primarily to the charter trade.

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Beneteau 393

  • By Darrell Nicholson
  • Updated: May 1, 2002

beneteau 393 sailboatdata

Perhaps one of the most delightful things about owning a boat is setting out on a breezy afternoon with only vague ideas of where you might want to go. You’re simply getting away for a while, and if you can do it with a touch of speed and excitement, well, that would be nice, too.

The Beneteau 393 is meant for just such days.

A scaled-down version of the 473, which won the award for the Best Production Cruiser Over $200,000 in Cruising World’s 2001 Boat of the Year competition, this is the first completely new model to be built at Beneteau’s recently expanded facility in Marion, South Carolina.

The choice of interiors suits different tastes. The two-cabin version, which we sailed, is the most practical for cruising. It features a large athwartship double berth tucked to starboard under the cockpit, a U-shaped galley to port, a navigation station to starboard, and, forward of that, a large bar and cabinet. A novel departure from the expected settee, the cabinet yields additional room for storage, but it occupies space in the saloon that might otherwise have served as a sea berth.

In the three-cabin layout, two fore-and-aft double berths stretch under the cockpit, the navigation station sits to port, and a fore-and-aft galley replaces the two-cabin version’s bar and cabinet.

Both layouts feature a head and shower forward of a roomy double berth, a second head and shower aft, and seating for eight at a U-shaped dinette with an inboard bench. The ports and hatches offer excellent ventilation, although a pair of cowl vents would be welcome for wet passages. Three acrylic windows in the cabin top and six deadlights brighten the cherry-stained interior.

We sailed the boat in 17 knots of gusty, southwesterly wind on Narragansett Bay. Whitecaps and a rolling ocean swell greeted us off Castle Hill when we cleared the entrance to the bay. Hard on the wind, we were punching through the steep, tide-opposed waves at about 6.5 knots, yet the cockpit stayed surprisingly dry even without a dodger, which the boat is well set up to accommodate. The molded cabin liner and bulkheads bonded to the hull on all sides provided ample structural support. The hull shape, a fairly fine entry at the bow with a broad flat section aft, made reaching a blast.

The long genoa track and the traveler across the cabin top allow for precise sail trimming, with all lines led aft. Single-line reefing was quick and easy. The cockpit’s T-shaped layout makes it easy to scoot around the wheel and, at rest, offers enough room to host a small village for dinner, with a foldout table at the binnacle to spread the fare. One thing I’d like to see in the cockpit is a foot brace along the centerline to make a windward seat more comfortable when beating. The boat handled exceptionally under power (a 40-horsepower Westerbeke), allowing for easy maneuvering in and out of the slip, despite the gusty winds in the harbor.

The biggest attraction of Beneteau is value. The company’s streamlined production process makes for a very competitively priced 39-footer: $138,000 for the boat we sailed, which came with an electronics package. Not a bad deal for something you can’t really put a price on: a windy day, a new boat, and no particular place to go.

Darrell Nicholson is a CW associate editor who spent 10 years sailing the Caribbean and Pacific aboard his own 32-footer.

  • More: 2001 - 2010 , 31 - 40 ft , beneteau , Coastal Cruising , monohull , Sailboat Reviews , Sailboats
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Oceanis 393 Beneteau

The oceanis 393 beneteau is a 39.33ft masthead sloop designed by berret racoupeau yacht design and built in fiberglass by beneteau between 2000 and 2007., 600 units have been built., it accomodates 6 people in 3 cabins plus salon..

The Oceanis 393 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 393 Beneteau sailboat under sail

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Beneteau 393 - Sailboat Data, Parts & Rigging

Beneteau 393 - Mainsail Covers

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beneteau 393 sailboatdata

From Cherbourg to Lisbon aboard Oceanis 393 Clipper

Read the story of Christian, a sailor from Normandy

 “In 2015, we decided to set sail to different surroundings on our Oceanis 393 Clipper , 2004 Performance version, to Lisbon from Cherbourg! I left Cherbourg in April 2015, with a crew member I found on the Internet on board. We stopped off in Camaret on the way, where I picked up another loyal crew member. The Bay of Biscay crossing took 30 hours, taking watches in turn, without meeting a single boat, except when we approached the coast (remember that we were on a heavily loaded family cruiser). I dropped off my crew members and then continued alone to Muros (Galicia, Spain), where my wife joined me. We then stopped off in Lexoes and in Cascais on a mooring for a night before sailing up the Tage to the Parque das Naçoes Marina. The boat performed very well, but we had to be careful to avoid excess canvas and anticipate the weather. Our Oceanis was comfortable and very bright thanks to her overhead portholes . We really loved this boat, which we miss, but due to health problems we had to let her go."

Published on 14.05.2019

  • Sailing yacht
  • Oceanis Clipper (1995 - 2008)

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Beneteau 393

The Beneteau 393 is a popular sailing vessel known for its spaciousness and comfort, making it a great option for extended cruising and liveaboard use. With an overall length of just over 39 feet and a beam of 13 feet, the 393 is designed to provide ample interior volume, and can comfortably accommodate up to six passengers. The boat features a well-appointed salon with a large U-shaped settee, a functional galley with ample counter space, and three private cabins with plenty of storage space. Additionally, the 393's shallow draft allows it to navigate in shallower waters and anchorages, making it a versatile choice for a variety of cruising destinations.

Under sail, the Beneteau 393 is known for its responsive handling and good performance, with a well-balanced rig that is easily controlled by a small crew. The boat features a furling mainsail and genoa, allowing for easy sail handling and making it a suitable option for both experienced and novice sailors. Overall, the Beneteau 393 is a comfortable and versatile sailing vessel that is well-suited for extended cruising and liveaboard use, with the ability to navigate in a variety of conditions and environments.

LOA: 38.16 ft LWL: 35.08 ft Beam: 13.00 ft Draft: 5.08 ft Displacement: 17152.00 lbs Ballast: 0.00 lbs Hull type: Fin w/bulb & spade rudder Hull construction: FG Rigging type: Masthead Sloop

Beneteau 393 for sale in the last 12 months

Below you'll find the latest Beneteau 393 listings for the last 12 months. We compare the listing price with boats listed in the past and the color coding indicates if the price is good (green = below the average listing price) or more on the expensive side (red = seller is asking more than the average listing price).

Beneteau 393 listing prices over time

Listing details.

beneteau 393 sailboatdata

Russia Maps Show 25% of Moscow Without Power Amid Winter Freeze 'Emergency'

R ussian President Vladimir Putin has ordered the nationalization of an ammunition plant in Moscow after a mechanical failure caused tens of thousands of Muscovites to lose heat and water amid freezing temperatures beginning last week.

On January 4, a heating main burst at the Klimovsk Specialized Ammunition Plant in the town of Podolsk, which is around 30 miles south of central Moscow. Since then, tens of thousands of Russians are reported to have no heating in their homes in the Moscow region amid subzero temperatures.

Affected areas include the cities of Khimki, Balashikha, Lobnya, Lyubertsy, Podolsk, Chekhov, Naro-Fominsk, and Podolsk, a map published by a Russian Telegram channel and shared on other social media sites shows.

Other Russian media outlets reported that in Moscow, residents of Balashikha, Elektrostal, Solnechnogorsk, Dmitrov, Domodedovo, Troitsk, Taldom, Orekhovo-Zuyevo, Krasnogorsk, Pushkino, Ramenskoye, Voskresensk, Losino-Petrovsky, and Selyatino are also without power.

That means that in total, more than a quarter of Moscow's cities have been hit with power outages and a lack of heating.

Newsweek has contacted Russia's Foreign Ministry for comment via email.

Many residents have taken to publishing video appeals on social media to complain about their freezing conditions. In one clip, people living in Moscow say that they are left with no choice but to warm their homes with gas stoves, heaters, and "whatever else we can find." Others said they are lighting fires in the streets to keep warm.

Andrei Vorobyov, governor of the Moscow region, announced on Tuesday that Putin ordered the ammunition plant to be nationalized because two of its owners have been "located abroad." He didn't name the individuals.

"We received the right to take control of this boiler house within the framework of an emergency," Vorobiev said, adding that the plant's boiler room was managed "very poorly" and there was "virtually no qualified competent personnel."

Russia's Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case over Klimovsk Specialized Ammunition Plant not meeting safety requirements.

On Tuesday, the committee said that because of the incident, the deputy head of Podolsk's administration, the head of the plant's boiler house, and the general director of the ammunition plant had been detained.

Residents of Selyatino have described the situation as "some kind of struggle for survival," Russian Telegram channel ASTRA reported.

Power outages have also struck St. Petersburg, Rostov, Volgograd, Voronezh, Primorsky Territory, and Yekaterinburg.

Do you have a tip on a world news story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about the Russia-Ukraine war? Let us know via [email protected].

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People walk on the Patriarch Bridge over the Moskva river, with the Kremlin seen in distance, during a snowfall in Moscow on November 24, 2023. Tens of thousands of Muscovites don't have heat and water in their homes.

IMAGES

  1. SailboatData.com

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  2. Beneteau 393

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  3. Beneteau Oceanis 393

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  4. Beneteau Oceanis 393

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  5. Sea Life is a Beneteau 393 sailing boat

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  6. Beneteau Oceanis 393 For Sale

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VIDEO

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COMMENTS

  1. BENETEAU 393

    Also called OCEANIS 393 and MOORINGS 403. Deep draft: 6.25'/1.91m.

  2. Beneteau 393

    The Beneteau 393 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of glassfibre, with wood trim. The hull is solid fibreglass and the deck is balsa -cored. It has a masthead sloop rig, with a deck-stepped mast, two sets of swept spreaders and aluminium spars with stainless steel wire standing rigging. The hull has a raked stem, a reverse transom ...

  3. Beneteau

    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 ...

  4. Beneteau 393

    Beneteau 393 on the water. Founded in 1884, Beneteau originally built fishing boats for the Bay of Biscay. Still a family-run concern, it turned to yachts and has built sailboats throughout most of the 20th century. For more than a decade now it has been building boats onboth sides of the Atlantic.

  5. Beneteau 393

    The Beneteau 393 is a 38.16ft masthead sloop designed by Berret Racoupeau Yacht Design and built in fiberglass by Beneteau since 2002. The Beneteau 393 is a light sailboat which is slightly under powered. ... The data on this page has been derived from different sources but a significant part is attributed to sailboatdata.com. We thank them for ...

  6. Beneteau Cyclades 39.3

    The Beneteau Cyclades 39.3 is a French sailboat that was designed by Berret-Racoupeau as a cruiser and first built in 2007. The series is named for the Greek island chain.. The Cyclades 39.3 is a development of the 2002 Beneteau 393 from the same design team, optimized for the yacht charter market with innovations such as dual ship's wheels.

  7. Beneteau Oceanis 393

    Also called BENETEAU 393 and MOORINGS 403. Deep draft model: 6.25'. ... Source: sailboatdata.com / CC BY. Embed Embed. View Demo. Embed this page on your own website by copying and pasting this code. For Sale View More . Green Cove Springs, FL, US 2007 Beneteau 393 $124,500 USD. Jacksonville, FL, US ...

  8. Beneteau 393

    Beneteau 393 is a 38′ 1″ / 11.6 m monohull sailboat designed by Berret-Racoupeau and built by Beneteau starting in 2002. Great choice! Your favorites are temporarily saved for this session. ... sailboatdata.com / CC BY. Embed Embed. View Demo.

  9. Beneteau Oceanis 393, Powerful Passagemaker

    Beneteau's Oceanis 393. By David McCreary. May 27, 2004. The Beneteau Oceanis 393 is a 39' passagemaker featuring many of the design and esthetic elements as the Beneteau 473, which won the Cruising World's Best Production Cruiser award for 2001. The 393 was the first totally new model to be built at Beneteau's expanded facility in Marion, S.C.

  10. Beneteau Cyclades 39.3

    Beneteau Cyclades 39.3 is a 39′ 3″ / 12 m monohull sailboat designed by Berret-Racoupeau and built by Beneteau starting in 2007. ... Probably based on the earlier BENETEAU 393/OCEANIS 393. CYCLADES was a brand sold primarily to the charter trade. Suggest Improvements Source: sailboatdata.com / CC BY. Embed Embed. View Demo. Embed this page ...

  11. Beneteau 393

    The Beneteau 393 is meant for just such days. A scaled-down version of the 473, which won the award for the Best Production Cruiser Over $200,000 in Cruising World s 2001 Boat of the Year competition, this is the first completely new model to be built at Beneteau s recently expanded facility in Marion, South Carolina. The choice of interiors ...

  12. Cyclades 393 Beneteau

    The Cyclades 393 Beneteau is a 39.27ft fractional sloop designed by Berret Racoupeau Yacht Design and built in fiberglass by Beneteau since 2007. ... The data on this page has been derived from different sources but a significant part is attributed to sailboatdata.com. We thank them for their encouragements and friendly collaboration.

  13. Oceanis 393 Beneteau

    The Oceanis 393 Beneteau is a 39.33ft masthead sloop designed by Berret Racoupeau Yacht Design and built in fiberglass by Beneteau between 2000 and 2007. ... The data on this page has been derived from different sources but a significant part is attributed to sailboatdata.com. We thank them for their encouragements and friendly collaboration.

  14. OCEANIS CLIPPER 393

    The Oceanis 393 is a real concentration of the art of living on a cruise. With healthy behaviour and easy manoeuvring, the Oceanis Clipper 393 is well-suited to sailing with a small crew. The symbol of this new Oceanis generation is designed exclusively for your sailing pleasure. Naval designer : Jean BERRET ; Olivier RACOUPEAU.

  15. MOORINGS 39

    LENGTH: Traditionally, LOA (length over all) equaled hull length. Today, many builders use LOA to include rail overhangs, bowsprits, etc. and LOD (length on deck) for hull length. That said, LOA may still mean LOD if the builder is being honest and using accepted industry standards developed by groups like the ABYC (American Boat and Yacht Council).

  16. beneteau 393 Archives

    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.

  17. Beneteau 393

    Beneteau 393 - Sailboat Data, Parts & Rigging. Sailboat data, rig dimensions and recommended sail areas for Beneteau 393 sailboat. Tech info about rigging, halyards, sheets, mainsail covers and more. Sailboat Data directory for over 8,000 sailboat designs and manufacturers.

  18. From Cherbourg to Lisbon aboard Oceanis 393 Clipper

    "In 2015, we decided to set sail to different surroundings on our Oceanis 393 Clipper, 2004 Performance version, to Lisbon from Cherbourg! I left Cherbourg in April 2015, with a crew member I found on the Internet on board. We stopped off in Camaret on the way, where I picked up another loyal crew member. The Bay of Biscay crossing took 30 hours, taking watches in turn, without meeting a ...

  19. Beneteau 393 Sailboat values and recent boats for sale

    Under sail, the Beneteau 393 is known for its responsive handling and good performance, with a well-balanced rig that is easily controlled by a small crew. The boat features a furling mainsail and genoa, allowing for easy sail handling and making it a suitable option for both experienced and novice sailors. ... More specs at sailboatdata ...

  20. Beneteau 393 boats for sale

    Find Beneteau 393 boats for sale in your area & across the world on YachtWorld. Offering the best selection of Beneteau boats to choose from.

  21. Radio Moscow: circa 1968

    Radio Moscow: circa 1968. February 11, 2014. Many thanks to David Firth, who is kindly sharing shortwave radio recordings he made on his reel-to-reel recording equipment in the late 1960's. Firth is uncovering and digitizing these recordings as time allows. We are grateful for this recording of Radio Moscow, which Firth recorded in 1968.

  22. Strange Glow Over Moscow Skies Triggers Panic as Explosions Reported

    B right flashes lit up the night sky in southern Moscow in the early hours of Thursday morning, new footage appears to show, following reports of an explosion at an electrical substation on the ...

  23. Russia Maps Show 25% of Moscow Without Power Amid Winter Freeze ...

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered the nationalization of an ammunition plant in Moscow after a mechanical failure caused tens of thousands of Muscovites to lose heat and water amid ...