New Posts New Posts RSS Feed: Controversial Topic of the Week
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Register Register  Login Login

Controversial Topic of the Week

 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 678910 16>
Author
Stefan Lloyd View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more


Joined: 03 Aug 04
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1599
Post Options Post Options   Quote Stefan Lloyd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Controversial Topic of the Week
    Posted: 26 Jan 06 at 5:12pm
Well originally I said this applied to "racing classes".
Back to Top
olly_love View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 18 Jan 05
Location: United Kingdom
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1145
Post Options Post Options   Quote olly_love Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Jan 06 at 6:05pm
the national 12 will prob live forever. it is intresting and fast. with a development class you can bond with the boat rather than the plastic things that are comming off the production line
TWO FRANK-Hunter Impala


Back to Top
Chris 249 View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 10 May 04
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2041
Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 12:13am
Originally posted by DiscoBall

Chequebook sailing? - Parallel Universes…

 

Looking at my 5 years in 12s and comparing it to the likely events of trying to sail in SMOD class:

 

Year 1

 

N12 –  save up £600 for a 1970s 12.  Have enough money left over to do a small amount of the circuit and get to meet lots of new people. A the season progesses I get better and am at the front of the club fleet. Despite being the oldest boat at the champs I finish 10 places above last.The boat suits my novice abilities a new boat wouldn’t make any difference

 

SMOD – not going to get a loan on my wages, therefore can’t buy new or used boat.  Can’t do any practice, go racing on the circuit or meet any new friends through it. Just shiny ads in Y&Y.



Well, for the price of a Nat 12 that beat 10 boats, you could have got a Laser Radial that would probably let you beat 100+ boats at a nationals, and certainly allows you to beat guys who as similar to Steve Cockerill's pace......

The Beecher Moore quote (from '63) follows a summary of the definition of restricted classes, in an article sub-titled "restricted classes have served their purpose". It goes on to say that "never has so much effort been made with so little result as it has been in the three restricted classes of Great Britain." He reckoned in 30 years there had been 800 I-14s built, and Dinghy Year Book figures indicate that by that time there were 2,020 N12s and 1,610 MRs - total of 4,500 over 30 years. (I'm sorry I said it was something like 2,000, we had some guests living in the study so I couldn't get at my photocopy of the article and had to go from memory). Each year he reckoned 250  boats were built among the 3 classes.

In contrast, the cheap ply ODs were growing at a rate of about 6,000 PER YEAR; there were 9,000 Ents (in just 7 years!), 5,700 GPs, and 3,800 Herons.

Beecher made the interesting point that designers in a development class are restricted by the rules, whereas a designer creating a new OD has much freedom. So the "new" ODs of his time could use cheaper construction methods, have more buoyancy than some of the restricted classes, self-draining cockpits, trapezes, hollow flare in the hulls, etc etc etc. The reduced cost, and factors like the fact that the ODs were competitive even when designed for more stability and user-friendliness, attracted the sailors who largely made up the dinghy boom which gave us today's sailing.

The new wave of performance ODs, after all, were the ones who popularised traps, sliding seats and self-draining cockpits etc in the shape of the 505, FD, Osprey, Gwen 12, Hornet etc etc. Such things were banned from the restricted classes (and Aussie skiffs although they don't like to admit it.) Interstingly though, when you graph the numbers of new dinghies hitting the water, there is no evidence for Frank Bethwaite's claim that the dinghy boom was created by the arrival of the fast new boats like the 505, FD etc.

As far as I can see, the age of popular dinghy sailing was created by the ply and glass ODs, not by N12s or 505s or anything like that.

Beecher may have been wrong, and he may have had an economic incentive in what he wrote (like someone in our own time) but as an incredibly influential man on the UK dinghy scene at the time surely his opinion deserves some credit.

Also, if the N12 basically created the modern dinghy classes, then how come modern dinghies evolved in the many countries that have never had N12s?

I'm not meaning to knock the N12, which like the MR is a very important boat. In some ways N12s and MRs really seemed to lead the world at times (I reckon March Hare was the first dinghy in the world to have sections like the current norm). But to imply that they largely created the modern dinghy classes, or that you can't get a competitive 700 squid SMOD, seemed to be pushing the point a bit hard.



Edited by Chris 249
Back to Top
Chris 249 View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 10 May 04
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2041
Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 12:23am
Originally posted by Jack Sparrow

So for real cheque book sailing you'd import one from AU and be a shed
load faster than every one else over here, and it's a so called STRICK ONE
DESIGN. That'll be the same cheque book that buys there new sails form
the middle of the role of Dacron and gets a new set every time the sails
have done a windy regatta.



I don't know whether Australian Lasers are actually faster, but I DO know for a fact that in Lasers (full rig and Radial) you can be top 10 nationally and win titles against world-class (ie world champions) opposition  with a dead-stock boat, with a sail, board and spars picked up from the top of the stack without any checking.

AND you can win a Youth Nationals, an Open Districts (ahead of the Open world champ), finish 5th overall at the nationals (as a youth) and get into the top 25 at the Open worlds, all with one racing sail and one 15 year old training sail.

PS; yes, the worlds was not sailed with the same sail - boats and rigs are supplied at the worlds. But the entire campaign - including winning a world team place by beating the world Open champ - was sailed with one racing sail.


Back to Top
Chris Noble View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 26 Nov 04
Location: Scotland
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 710
Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris Noble Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 7:04am
what classes are you referring to and whom is it that you have beat?
Competitive Boat Insurance From Noble Marine

FOR SALE:

I14 2 Masts 2 poles 3 Booms, Foils Kites/Mains/Jibs too many to list.
Back to Top
JimC View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 17 May 04
Location: United Kingdom
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 6662
Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 8:45am
Originally posted by Stefan Lloyd

Where I disagree is that, at least in all the classes I have sailed in, the people buying new boats take them to the Nationals. That's why they buy them.


I really can't be bothered to do some serious research on this, but lets take the Laser 4000. According to the Racing Classes Review L4000 4658 was built in 2003.

Looking at the last two Champs these are the boats with a later sail number that attended one of those Champs:-
4682, 4709, 4804, 4637, 4641, 4674, 4682
That's 7 out of 24 up to the latest sail number that did attend. No doubt some of those boats will turn out at Champs under future owners, or when the event comes round to a more local venue, but I think that goes a way to proving my point.

That same calculation fror the N12s shows 11 boats out of 13 attending the Champs, and about three times as many boats doing two champs running.

What would be an interesting exercise would be to take a bunch of classes and calculate how often the regular top sailors change boats, which might be an index of the degree of cheque book sailing within the classes concerned.

Edited by JimC
Back to Top
DiscoBall View Drop Down
Far too distracted from work
Far too distracted from work


Joined: 03 Jan 05
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 305
Post Options Post Options   Quote DiscoBall Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 10:11am

Originally posted by Chris 249


Well, for the price of a Nat 12 that beat 10 boats, you could have got a Laser Radial that would probably let you beat 100+ boats at a nationals, and certainly allows you to beat guys who as similar to Steve Cockerill's pace......

1) The comparison was meant to be to a similar, recent smod - the laser is a law unto itself.

2) The 10th from last was a reflection of my own inexperience and a not very well maintained boat - a sailor of the ability to finish at the top of the radial fleet could probably take a well maintained old 12 and finish at the front of the 12 fleet.  In fact the week after that champs I went to Salcombe regatta where a good 12 sailor in an even older boat than mine was beating the top guys from the champs. (And from further recollection I managed to get to the windward mark ahead of a past Int Canoe World Champ - sailing a brand new boat - in a couple of champs races...) 

3)I want a boat to be enjoyable to sail - personally I find the laser an unattractive and unrewarding boat to sail.

4) I bought a £200 Europe a couple of years back, technically a one design, though admittedly not strict I felt far more outclassed taking it to the champs.  there was far more difference in forward speed and pointing to the new boats compared to the 12.  That said I really enjoyed the Europe and will get a better one at some point.

Tim

Back to Top
Chris 249 View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 10 May 04
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2041
Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 11:08am
Originally posted by Chris Noble

what classes are you referring to and whom is it that you have beat?


As mentioned, the classes are Laser (big rig) and Laser Radial. The big rig stuff was some time ago, but certainly at master's level you can still beat guys like Adam French (3 world Apprentice and Masters titles, 2nd this year) and Dave Early (world Apprentice champ last year, 4th this year) regularly on a '78 boat - as was proven in our Masters states earlier this year.

These guys are not Schiedt or Ainslie - but Adam for instance is often up with the female Olympians, and he would beat well over 90% of Laser sailors. So only a minority really have cause to complain about their gear.
Back to Top
Chris 249 View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 10 May 04
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2041
Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 11:18am
Originally posted by DiscoBall

Originally posted by Chris 249


Well, for the price of a Nat 12 that beat 10 boats, you could have got a Laser Radial that would probably let you beat 100+ boats at a nationals, and certainly allows you to beat guys who as similar to Steve Cockerill's pace......

1) The comparison was meant to be to a similar, recent smod - the laser is a law unto itself.

2) The 10th from last was a reflection of my own inexperience and a not very well maintained boat - a sailor of the ability to finish at the top of the radial fleet could probably take a well maintained old 12 and finish at the front of the 12 fleet.  In fact the week after that champs I went to Salcombe regatta where a good 12 sailor in an even older boat than mine was beating the top guys from the champs. (And from further recollection I managed to get to the windward mark ahead of a past Int Canoe World Champ - sailing a brand new boat - in a couple of champs races...) 

3)I want a boat to be enjoyable to sail - personally I find the laser an unattractive and unrewarding boat to sail.

4) I bought a £200 Europe a couple of years back, technically a one design, though admittedly not strict I felt far more outclassed taking it to the champs.  there was far more difference in forward speed and pointing to the new boats compared to the 12.  That said I really enjoyed the Europe and will get a better one at some point.

Tim



OK, I didn't realise the comparison was limited to recent modern SMODs. Some older SMODS (Tasar for one) feature extremely competitive old boats.

I certainly agree that sailing skill is the major part of the equation, and old boats can do really, really well in development and OD classes. But I can't for the life of me work out how some classes claim to be better because they can develop (ie newer boats going faster) and also claim that the old boats are still competitive (ie old boats are just as fast).

It all seems to be very complicated and vary enormously from class to class and race to race - here a '60s Canoe is very competitive overall and can do well  or beat guys in the top 6- 12 in the world when it's flat or fluky or really windy, but given a boatspeed test in moderate breeze and low chop the old boat is dogmeat against the newer boats. Which condition do you use as the test?
Back to Top
Isis View Drop Down
Really should get out more
Really should get out more
Avatar

Joined: 01 Sep 05
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2753
Post Options Post Options   Quote Isis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Jan 06 at 11:45am

Originally posted by Chris 249

Originally posted by Jack Sparrow

So for real cheque book sailing you'd import one from AU and be a shed
load faster than every one else over here, and it's a so called STRICK ONE
DESIGN. That'll be the same cheque book that buys there new sails form
the middle of the role of Dacron and gets a new set every time the sails
have done a windy regatta.



I don't know whether Australian Lasers are actually faster, but I DO know for a fact that in Lasers (full rig and Radial) you can be top 10 nationally and win titles against world-class (ie world champions) opposition  with a dead-stock boat, with a sail, board and spars picked up from the top of the stack without any checking.

AND you can win a Youth Nationals, an Open Districts (ahead of the Open world champ), finish 5th overall at the nationals (as a youth) and get into the top 25 at the Open worlds, all with one racing sail and one 15 year old training sail.

PS; yes, the worlds was not sailed with the same sail - boats and rigs are supplied at the worlds. But the entire campaign - including winning a world team place by beating the world Open champ - was sailed with one racing sail.


Id agree with you that its perfectly possible to do what you describe without 'cheaquebooking' but you cant deny that a number of people still do it. Whether or not it makes any real difference to the speed, people are still driven to spending more money to get the top kit and surely this is even worse than the 'cheaquebooking' people moan about in development classes where people spend their money and actualy see a return from it.

 



Edited by Isis
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 678910 16>

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down

Bulletin Board Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 9.665y
Copyright ©2001-2010 Web Wiz
Change your personal settings, or read our privacy policy