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Sailing in your 80% Healthspan

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NickM99 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote NickM99 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Sailing in your 80% Healthspan
    Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 5:02pm
Good call. It seems to sail to its handicap throughout much of the wind range. 125kg though. Gentle concrete launching ramp needed!
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tink View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tink Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 5:03pm
Originally posted by Riv

As I'm responsible for our fleet of club Lasers and our older demographic don't like sailing them. I've just taken an old mainsail and shortened the leach by 37cm. This means the boom will be horizontal when  the mast is bent to the old block to block position with the traveller block on the gunwale. I'll see how it goes this year.

I have also moved the traveller 9" forward to remove the mainsheet around the stern thing. Works well.

There are other simple adaptions I can make to make the Laser easier for us older sailors for almost zero cost

I see no reason not to adapt boats to make them easier to sail within the club context. I'd rather have them used.
Nice ideas, I have frequently thought local  ‘benches’ a bit like the Maverick would make the Laser more comfortable while keeping the low free board and ease of righting 


Tink
https://tinkboats.com

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tink View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tink Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 5:42pm
Originally posted by Wiclif

The answer for me is the K1 with a lifting keel.

Still possible to push ashore on the trolley, lifting keel makes it self righting, and the carbon rig is powerful and makes the boat interesting even in lighter winds
A great boat, do you have a weed strategy? 
Tink
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Sam.Spoons View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Sam.Spoons Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 5:47pm
That's remarkable, it weighs the same, all up, as an RS400!
Spice 346 "Flat Broke"
Blaze 671 "supersonic soap dish"
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tink View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tink Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 6:15pm
Originally posted by Sam.Spoons

That's remarkable, it weighs the same, all up, as an RS400!

The wonder of carbon fibre, the light rig puts less demand on the deep keel so it can be lighter. The clever bit IMHO was not going too far and fitting an asymmetric but using a club boom allowing easy goose winging.
Tink
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Sam.Spoons Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 6:19pm
Originally posted by tink

Originally posted by Do Different

I do understand it's rude to shout on the internet but for effect please forgive me in this case, a TWO PERSON boat. A team of two of any degree of fitness will exceed the sum of the individuals.

One to pull it up and one in water to stabilise and then one in to help the other aboard.  Plus, one to remember the course while the other drives the boat. LOL Wink

A single trapeze boat is also good, one to lounge on the wire while the other perches comfortably; works for us. Smile 

 

Good shout

Not so sure about a trap boat, may be ok on the coast but inland they require a degree of agility that I no longer have. 
Spice 346 "Flat Broke"
Blaze 671 "supersonic soap dish"
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tink View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tink Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 6:42pm
Originally posted by NickM99

Good topic. (I enjoyed rereading Dougal's piece from 2016.) This has been discussed in a previous thread but I feel that if you cannot recover your boat and get back in after a capsize you should change to one you can manage or not go out in conditions where the rescue boat is likely to be in demand.  

I would love to get a H2 but I suspect my Solo would be as fast in a drifter and less of a handful in a blow and I would lose class racing.  I really hope the H2 class continues to thrive and grow but with almost new 100 Solos being registered every year and high resale values, it looks a more reliable investment for my tapering stage of sailing.

Thanks, a very good article that articulates my thoughts much better than I can https://www.yachtsandyachting.com/news/188538/Silver-Dream-Racer
Tink
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Dougaldog View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Dougaldog Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 7:45pm
Back again.....I'm not sure if I am a journalist who does Championships RO, or a Race Officer who writes a bit - either way it is a good combination as you  get the best view in the house as the fleet are sailing. At their more recent even down at Arun SC, I was able to pull the racing forward as the forecast on Day 3 was starting light and getting lighter until 'nothing'.... so I watched the boat across a spread of conditions. The performance in the light stuff is fine.....for those sailors with the knowledge of how to change their rig from one mode to another. The difference between the leaders, who had this cracked - the mid fleet, who knew that changes were needed but didn't get them right and the tail.... who were still stuck in 'medium winds' mode was   so obvious to us on the Committee Boat to be a topic of much conversation. I've sailed the boat in a range of weather (as an 'older' man) and don't think the boat is over canvassed - if you really want to get the feel for this try the earlier H1 which begat the H2 - the rig is even bigger and makes the boat an even better performer in light to medium conditions, but more of a handful in breeze. Once you get used to the boat it doesn't seem too big.... a lot less than the Blaze and it is a much nicer boat than the Blaze (and the HALO) to sail in light airs. Like every new boat, people are still working out which way to rig it works best - there are people sailing with a centre mainsheet on a bridle, on a track, transom sheeting - unlike some other SMODS, how you rig it is left open, but it does result in a wider spread of how people sail it.
D
Dougal H
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tink Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 8:12pm
From this angle I think the 80%er might need to be doing a lot of yoga to recover efficiently from this. The Blaze has the option stepping onto the gunwale forward of the rack to recover. Clearly this is only one aspect of the design. Many Blaze sailors appear to spend a lot of  time kneeling in the light stuff, which Streaker, Solo and even Laser sailors don’t need to worry about. 




Tink
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http://proasail.blogspot.com
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Rupert View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Rupert Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Dec 19 at 8:20pm
If assuming a boat will capsize,that photo looks better than most. The central buoyancy doing its job well.
Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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