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5420 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote 5420 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Topper Spice
    Posted: 17 Mar 05 at 9:46pm

you need  lot of ability to beat people that have a faster boat than you

wit a cherab you have to keep pending money where in a 800 you do not you buy the boat you go and race

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KnightMare View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote KnightMare Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Mar 05 at 9:54pm
Yeh but if you hve the skills and the boat isnt too harrible you still could be able to.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote 5420 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Mar 05 at 10:21pm

yse but you shoud give you self as bigger advanteg you can

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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Mar 05 at 10:28pm
Originally posted by 5420

you sail with your mates and at the same time you are all going bankrupt



Lets think, major bits on current boat (the one in tha avatar) I bought a new main for my old Cherub 1988, I built the new boat and got a new mast, jib and kite in 89, kept the main from the other boat. I replaced the kite with an asymettric in '91, got a new jib in 92. I took three years of sailing it from 94, got another new jib in 98 after a rule change, and had the kite recut. 2001 I got a new mast, main and jib, 2003 a new kite and put in a mast stump, 2004 a new boom and bowsprit. 2003 I won the inlands, 2004 I took the "Pre 97" built boat prize at the Nationals.

Most SMOD sailors at my club have had four or five boats in that time.

I luv Wight is I think still on the same spars and main main on his 97 boat which has taken 3 championships, I think he's had two jibs and kites in that time.

I don't really think that sounds like bankruptcy - at least not compared to what the 29er sailors I know spend... The stuff about development class sailors spending a fortune is a myth, just the same as the one about SMOds having closer racing. When you do the research there's no great correlation between what people spend on boats and how tight the class rule set is, and similarly there's no correleation between the spread of finish times in the Champ fleet and how tight the rule is either.

If you want to sail one designs that's great, if you want to sail open rule boats that's great too, but the amount of money you spend or how close the racing is will have very little to do with that choice. There are plenty of good reasons to sail smods, the chief one being that you don't have to think about how to set up your boat (although that would be hell for me), but don't kid yourself that closer racing or cheaper costs are among them.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote KnightMare Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Mar 05 at 10:41pm

Now thats cleared things up. Definatly i think the amount spent on a boat changes by what class it is not what type it is. the make up of some boats means that they have to keep coming up with new sails and rigging to stay on top form. and others the boat and riggin will keep its edge for years. That is more based upon the way the boat was built (designed)

I think the thing was in a development class the changes could make the older boats obsolete, so you would have to shell out for each development, but if a class has been out for a while it will have leveled out a bit so the developments wont have as much affect, as they could have.

(please tell me if im wrong)

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Post Options Post Options   Quote andy_cherub Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 Mar 05 at 12:16am
Not at all - with changes in development it simply means the old boats can still be competive. Take Jim Champ, his cherub is an 1988 hull but still winning! If you did the same with an 1988 laser it will get killed on the circuit! Development means you can pretty much have the hull for life, just doing a little bit to make it latest spec rather than spending an absoulte fortune on a brand new boat.
-12ft skiff, Team 'CST Composites'
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Ignore my user name, my views are of a 12ft skiff
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Post Options Post Options   Quote 5420 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 Mar 05 at 7:46am

what i do and i think a lot of people do is look at the number of boats that ar racing in that fleet if you think that boats like 29er can get over 50 at the indlands you have a biger chamce of geting close recing than a boat that gets say 10 at the inlands i do not know how maney a chearb gets but i do know that it is betwean 10-20

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Post Options Post Options   Quote KnightMare Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 Mar 05 at 10:18am

Ok i take back everythign that i said then.

Yeah the closeness of racing has to take into account not only the number of boats that race but also the spread of their ability. Some of the classes that have massive starts have all the boats from club levle to national level compeating. It just means that the starts are harder but that the 'closeness' of racing is still the same. But if you have a class where all the boats are of realy good ability then the racing is bound to be close reagrdless of how many boats there are.

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Post Options Post Options   Quote 5420 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 Mar 05 at 11:33am

yaer say if you are in the laser nashanl squad you will have very close racing with the rest of the squad

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Granite Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 Mar 05 at 1:42pm

This topic has exploded since yesterday and there are so many things I want to say that I have forgotten most of them

Someone said that Development class sailors depend on thair cheque book and technology to win and not sailing skill. There is one cherub where the owner has built everything himself apart from the fittings and rope! Does that not take more skill than phoning up RS and quoting your credit card Number?

There is one (Soon to be two) cherub at the moment using a T-Foil rudder. Built by me in my garden shed with the complete carbon rudder and stock and tiller for a materials cost of between £150 and £200 I would be supprised if you could buy a 29er or 800 rudder for less than that.

The cherub does not have big fleets and sailing one takes a bit more commitment than sailing a one design, as with such a light weight hull they get damaged easily, but you easily develop the skill of repairing it yourself which is half the fun.

I enjoy thinking about hull shapes and rig designs and crew ergonomics and have more ideas for how to build boats than I can ever put into practice and that is all part of the fun of sailing a development class.

The One Designs have there place not everyone has the time or enthusiasum to sail a development class and the new breed of boats L400, RS800, 29er are not realy that bad but once you have sailed a real high performance boat Int14 or Cherub or A class Cat, and go back to a heavy one design you can realy feel the difference.

I weigh 12.5 stone and am 6ft 3.

 

If it doesn't break it's too heavy; if it does it wasn't built right
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