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gordon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote gordon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: two-sail dinghies
    Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 9:48am
Just been re-reading in an old(ish) copy of Y&Y  the Test of the Albacore.

It struck me that fans of two sail dinghies have some remarkable boats to choose from:

for the lightweights, the team racers and such like - the Firefly
for techies, boatbuilders and budding designers - the National 12
for those who like travelling round the UK with the occasional foray to the Indian sub-continent - the Ent
for the slightly heavier sailor with a preference for hot-dogs, Jack Daniels and maple syrup - the Albacore
for the lovers of barbies, tinnies and blokes called Bruce - the Tasar
for the adventurer who wants to sail against sailors from countries that have never been part of the British Empire, and spend the summer trailing round Europe - the Snipe
for the middleweight who wants to go to the Olympics - the Star (used to be a boat for heavyweights but then the class got an Italian Chairman - excuse this outburst of bitterness and prejudice)

There are probably more classes, but significantly in the above list no design is recent. Is the market saturated by such a plethora of fantastic boats or can't the major manufacturers be bothered?

Gordon
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guest Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 10:12am
It is all about volume for the major builders ...
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Stefan Lloyd View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Stefan Lloyd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 11:52am

Really Rick? How many of the classes Gordon has mentioned has a "major builder"?

Gordon: Star optimum crew weight is 420lb. Boxing super middleweight is max 168lb. I'm afraid Stars are still for heavyweights, even ones who cut a "bella figura".

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JimC View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 12:00pm
Originally posted by Guest#260

It is all about volume for the major builders ...


Agreed, but the two sail two hand boats are a pretty big segment of the market. SMODs haven't done well there to date for some reason though.

I did try and estimate relative popularities of different categories of boats a while back. See here...

Edited by JimC
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gordon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote gordon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 3:49pm
Stefan,
It is all a matter of perspective. At 125kg and 1m94 I consider anyone under 100kg and 1m85 to be, for all practical purposes, a dwarf! (I exagerate, slightly).

I don't really want to get into a debate about the Star Clas total crew weight. However the notion of an optimum weight for any boat usually implies that there are a variety of crew weights possible and that  a best compromise for good results has been empirically determined. In the Star the process is somewhat different: the best crew weight is the highest weight allowed by the class rules, and everybody tries to be at that weight. If the class rules allowed more weight all crews would increase their weight, and the boat would go faster.

The formula adopted means that the weight of the crew depends on the weight of the helm. There is not a single allup weight. The earliest formula was
Crew weight (C) = (106.6- Skipper weight S)/1.5+106.6 kgs which meant that at 114-115 kilos I could crew a helm of 95 kilos - which is what I did when I spent a season looking at Star transoms!

The new formula is c=((100-S)/2)+100kgs which means that at 115 kg I could crew for a helm of only 75 kg. Paradoxally, if I took the helm at 115kg I could have a crew of 92.5kg and we would be able to sail with an all up crew weight of 207.5kg.

The debate in the class was interesting. The Americans weren't really bothered because it only affected the one boat per fleet that qualify for champoinships. The Bacardi Cup is not subject to weight limits. The Europeans seemed to have  problems with the whole concept of Olympic athletes weighing more than 100kg. As soccer playing nations they had not spent their youth idolising the Pontypool front row and other fine figures of the larger specimens of humanity. Athletes are necessarily thin, light and not that tall it would seem!

I think a debate about weight limits in sailing would be intersting, maybe elsewhere on this forum. I am concerned that as people seem to be getting larger (even without taking into consideration obestity) the optimum or permitted crew weights  seem to be getting smaller. I would like to think that my son could go sailing with his colleague from the second row, but this now seems a forlorn hope.

Gordon
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Harry44981! View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Harry44981! Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 4:12pm
i'd class at mid weight bloke at about 80-85 kg. You're particularly tall, Gordon, but I doubt many people would fit in your redisigned average. i'm 180cm and 63kg- and there are full grown men a lot smaller and lighter than me.

I agree ther should be a true heavyweight dinghy, but would there be a big enough market? I think the current option is to go into something like an RS400 and get a crew/helm of a size that combined you are the correct weight.
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JimC View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 4:33pm
Originally posted by gordon

In the Star the process is somewhat different: the best crew weight is the highest weight allowed by the class rules, and everybody tries to be at that weight. If the class rules allowed more weight all crews would increase their weight, and the boat would go faster.


I believe that's true for most leadmines.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tgruitt Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 4:44pm
edit: post not really on topic


Edited by tgruitt
Needs to sail more...
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gordon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote gordon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 4:56pm
I agree. I will be away for a few days but wheni get back I will post my thoughts on weight limits and the decreasing size of sailors.

To get back to the 2-sail dinghies. There seems to be a lot of people sailing them, a big demand for tactical sailing (downwind legs become nautical chess-games when a gybe incurs no speed penalty). So why aren't the SMOD builders interested?

Gordon
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Post Options Post Options   Quote tickel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 06 at 10:50pm
The trouble with most 2 sail boats is that you need at least one friend. Wives are no use exept in exeptional circumstances and finding crew/helm who will stay together can be dificult. I am at least lucky to have been sailing with a miserable self centred bastard for the last 5 years. We carry on because no one else will take us on, exept the Tasar Nats when I sailed with my daughters boyfreind who tried to kill me. We do have two things in common, we are both crap and we have 9 children between us, 5 of his and 4 of mine. I can see no escape from this misery and we own half the Tasar each. Hey ho thats life.
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