Rossiter Pintail Mortagne sur Gironde, near Bordeaux |
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Laser 28 - Excellent example of this great design Hamble le rice |
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Laser 140101 Tynemouth |
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maxibuddah ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 06 Mar 09 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1760 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 12 Feb 13 at 12:29pm |
I never said that it was acceptable at a py meeting. It's just as important as a fleet race, however it's much more difficult to police and therefore its unfortunate but maybe you just have to accept that's its going to happen whether you like it or not. Unless the organisers insist on seeing every persons sails how can you police it? Two series in a row show that you cannot totally rely on self policing.
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Everything I say is my opinion, honest
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SoggyBadger ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 26 Oct 10 Location: The Wild Wood Online Status: Offline Posts: 552 |
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Exactly. Really the only people who have the authority say if a boat measures or not are the class measurers. So you'd need to have a class measurer on hand for each class entered. That doesn't sound practical for to me. |
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Best wishes from deep in the woods
SB |
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You're right of course Maxi. The realities are that a PY event is hard to police and some people will take advantage of that. It never ceases to amaze me how competitively some people take these things that they feel the need to do that.
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maxibuddah ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 06 Mar 09 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1760 |
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However in these instances peaky it could be that they are trialing stuff. They cannot do it in class series without compromising them so feel the only place left to them is the py events. Maybe in their eyes the event isn't actually important and they are not trying to obtain an unfair advantage over everyone else. I know it is to a lot of people though.
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Everything I say is my opinion, honest
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JimC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6662 |
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One could argue that what our friend Pondmonkey calls a witch hunt does serve as a crude check on dubious behaviour. Whilst the only real check on class rule observance in handicap events is the sportsmanship of the individual, high profile breaches of rules may be visible afterwards and may be commented on.
If so then they should retire, after all if its not important to them why would they care about getting a result. Of course they should also make sure they sail without impeding legitimate competitors. Edited by JimC - 12 Feb 13 at 12:49pm |
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rb_stretch ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 23 Aug 10 Online Status: Offline Posts: 742 |
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I think we are missing the point here as I totally agree that in a PY event the organisers can't possibly check every boat for class compliance. That is why people do things on trust and trust generally works very well until it is obvious that people are ignoring it and then where does it stop?
Edited by rb_stretch - 12 Feb 13 at 1:05pm |
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That, I think, is exactly the point Maxi, and what I mean about not p*ssing on your own doorstep.
Maybe the BM/Tiger isn't important to a multiclass champion (dunno, not in that position personally!), but it is to many who get up at 5am, spend over a hundred quid and freeze their nuts off. Inconsiderate, I think, to take the attitude that you don't want to upset your class mates but you don't care about compeitors from other classes. Sailmakers can always do two boat testing out of races, or enter their local (i.e. not open event) club race (and retiring if asked to), or they can retire at the end of the race - whilst making sure they don't disrupt those that are genuinely racing. There are, or have been, good prizes - including money - at these winter events. Imagine if you lost a grand because some prune thought French philosophy outweighed the concept of fairplay. Edited by Peaky - 12 Feb 13 at 12:58pm |
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pondmonkey ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Aug 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2202 |
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Well you see that's the nub of it isn't it? For some PY racing really, really isn't as important as class racing. I happen to agree with that point of view, although I haven't always and couldn't in all honesty even begin to estimate whether I'm in the minority or majority. I'd suggest that if PY racing was 'that important', more clubs would return data as it would be higher up the agenda of a local sailing committee. They'd also offer local adjustment as the norm, as per the SOP of the RYA, rather than allow the gross confusion and misunderstanding to proliferate around club members. If someone sails a minority class with little to no class racing and possibly no circuit, they may cling to PY as means to somehow validate their racing. If it's your 'be all and end all' race metric, then you are inevitably at risk of being blinkered to its well established and known faults, or completely the other way, and ultra-critical of them expecting the world to take it far more seriously and iron out said creases- either way, it's not good racing, it's nota good racing mindset to bury your results in a spreadsheets and statistics and doesn't actually demonstrate the very good and worthwhile aspects of what PY and handicap racing does offer the general sailing population. For me, handicap racing should be about bringing disparate folks together, to sail under one fun event, a celebration of the sport- the words I have used before here are 'festival of sailing' to capture the spirit of what an event running under PY should be like in my view. I accept these winter handicap events have morphed into something far more serious- pimpfests for the works team boys doesn't help, the post event witchhunt from glass house residents isn't great either. Somewhere in the middle is the usual knob-end with zero rules observation on the course ruining someone else's day as they too, when questioned, don't think clean mark roundings, leeward and starboard boats are 'important enough' when they're chasing down some clock. I choose not to go them... I don't need them, there's plenty of class racing on offer, so really if folks do want to take them 'so seriously' to justify their racing and spend hours pouring over statistics and spreadsheets in the name of making a fundamentally flawed, but 'fun' system, 'fairer', fine... crack on; but I hope they don't expect the rest of the sailing world to take handicap racing that seriously just because they say so. If that's patronising, so be it... but it's rod for their own back they've created in neglecting what's good about handicap racing.
Edited by pondmonkey - 12 Feb 13 at 1:03pm |
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Daniel Holman ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 17 Nov 08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 997 |
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I can't believe there has been so much written about this, 35 pages!
As long as the race officer can read the numbers at a Hcap event and there aren't two boats with the same numbers, really who cares? OD champs, maybe a bit different. And the fuss over the tape drive? My god. I appreciate that on one level; cheating is cheating, but, my tuppence worth: Class rules are written down as a codified way of conveying intent. The general intent of most class rules are quite rightly to preserve seaworthiness, robustness, control costs and ensure an appropriate degree of uniformity between boats in a class. N.B uniformity being different from class to class. The secondary reinforcement rule will have been written when JP Baudet (3Dl inventor/patent holder) was in short trousers. The intent of the secondary reinforcement rule, as someone has pointed out, is to insure against very light clths being used in the body of a panelled sail, a result which would be undersirable for the class for any of the above reasons - a result that would be likely without some such wording. Does anyone really think that tape drive sails, a totally generic technology, are intended to subvert the intent of the secondary reinforcement rule? Does anyone think that they are costlier / less robust / higher performing than the other membrane / non panelled competitors out there which have, lets be honest, totally overwhelmed tape drive in the performance sail market as a whole? Does anyone think that these guys wouldn't have won with panelled sails? Or other load path sails? Lets compare two different types of cheating: 1. Jimbo's honest, sometimes tearful confession that he had unknowingly competed with tapered spinnaker sheets in his RS100. The Oprah Winfrey slot is lined up. I trust all regattas have been retrospectively retired from. 2. The guy who knowingly removes 10kg of correctors / notches out the racks for a non scrutinised event Both technically cheating, but not on the same level, or deserving of the same punishment. I see the use of tape drive as being less heinous than #1, as the product itself is within the grey area of an interpretation, offers no real performance advantage over similar products, and if anything subverts the intent of the rule less than other (complaint) products. I say write a clause into the furball/Merlin rules explicitly allowing tape drive, thus avoiding needing to rewrite the rule fully. Its a total joke that in classes where 3Dl is rife, and where £15k boats are built 20kg underweight in carbon with big ingots of expensive lead in, that a slightly fringe but perfectly sound / affordable sailmaking technology that is in no way harming the class is being made such an example of due to the literal interpretation, ignorant of intent,of a rule written in the 1960s to prevent dodgy panelled sails from being used. (apologies for lack of punctuation, Holman draws breath) Give these guys the win they earned and deserve, lets stop getting all pious, vitriolic and daily mail esque (or at least leave that for the real cheats) and lets get to talking about stuff that is interesting / relevant. |
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I agree with you there James. But all amateur racing is supposed to be fun, even Salcombe Week. If I consider my Nationals a fun event, can I ignore the class rules?
Perhaps what is needed is a system of grading events. Class 1 events are deadly serious, no smiling, affairs where delibertae rule disobediance is punishable by rule 2 or 69. Class 5 events are where you take your triplets out in blatant disregard of Graduate rules, but who gives a sh*t, because its all about having fun. Personally, the Class 5 events sound much more my thing (and I don't even have triplets!). |
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