Laser 28 - Excellent example of this great design Hamble le rice |
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Laser 140101 Tynemouth |
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Rossiter Pintail Mortagne sur Gironde, near Bordeaux |
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skslr ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 24 Jul 06 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 139 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 09 Feb 10 at 4:38pm |
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Would the 59er have been more successful without people trying a trapeze? Or would it have been more successful if it would have had a trapeze right from the start? I do not even dare to guess that. But the huge kite may have been an important factor in making people think about a trapeze, on the other hand there was little effort by the manufacturer or designer to get the class going as intended. Both could be different for a new class. I guess the huge kite made it more of a boat for big sailing waters. Two male speed addicts having the possibility of sailing on big sailing waters and looking for a recent design? Sounds like international 14 / RS800 to me... The same people looking to sail on a pond/river/estuary where trapezes and kites are not worth the hassle? Hm...
I know you can make a 12 foot or 14 foot hull carry 150 kgs or more and taking weight better than a RS200 would be a real plus, as that is the only thing I do not like about them. But as a layman I hope there is a reason why many designers go to longer hulls than that if not limited by yesterday's class rules. In my point of view RS800s benefit from being longer than the Morrison int14's. I guess Ovington/RS/,,, could work on their margin if they would save a foot or two on their OD boats, but for some reason they don't. :-) |
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Slippery Jim ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Nov 09 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 586 |
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Of course, that is not the real reason. The 59er with wire is better up and down wind due to righting moment. It was marketing, fouled up with a manufacturer that was already producing/supporting a boat that takes weight, and one distributer in Europe who supports another class that takes weight. What´s the point of canibalising other well supported classes in favour of a design that might be more advanced? I say that even though the 59er is really great (for me) to sail. |
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Pass the skiff, man!
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getafix ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 28 Mar 06 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 2143 |
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Interesting" as this 59er why didn't it take off debate is, I wouldn't equate the likely success, or otherwise, of the 'Icon' to the demise of the 59er.... different market segment, different sailors being targeted, very different boat & builder - no real comparison to be made, the Tasar comparison is fairer and I think Mike's answered that one pretty well (and he's sailed them a lot so he should know something!...)
As far as the 59er's demise goes, for my .02- worth, I believe it has suffered from a poorly defined target market and lack of focus on one or two key locations to try and build up some critical mass, while it has got good numbers right now, I doubt the RS800 will survive very long either and will end up marginalised like some that went before (L5000...) because establised, well supported and development skiff classes exist already and by their very nature, if you don't keep developing you won't be fast enough to appeal to those who want your product because of the speed round the race course it offers; as soon as your SMOD is 'obsolete' you'll find yourself drawn to whatever is faster, flashier, cheaper/more expensive etc... if you want a two-person trapeze skiff get an i14, if you don't want to trapeze get a B14 |
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Feeling sorry for vegans since it became the latest fad to claim you are one
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Slippery Jim ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Nov 09 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 586 |
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To make a 14footer take more weight, just increase the amount of rocker. Good places to look are N12 older clinker designs and also Final Chapters. The 59er also has quite a lot of rocker, which also increases its light wind performance. But I´m not sure whether it would be worthwhile to use its hull as a restricted water platform for a different rig. Must find out how much the hull alone costs to produce in order to answer that question. I know we've been here before, but it really would disturb me seeing such nice lines ruined by having some odd-looking rig on top. ![]() |
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Pass the skiff, man!
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skslr ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 24 Jul 06 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 139 |
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Although I personally do currently not see any technical developments that could make the RS800 go down like the Laser 5000 in the near term future it obviously will happen at some point in time. But I guess RS will have made their money by then, because they exploited that market segment "fast" enough. Other options seem to be a development class being continuously redefined (int14) or a class that is regarded as a "dead end street" by the competitors (B14, all others put their money on trapezes for high performance dinghies). Anything to learn from that for the ICON project? One last word about the 59er (sorry!): As in any proper development project some benchmarking should be done, and I still think a 59er would be a candidate for upwind performance (no rigg change needed, o.k.?). Edited by skslr |
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Slippery Jim ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Nov 09 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 586 |
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No probs. upwind, it´s just downwind I wouln´t want to see no spi on a 59er. But anyway, a kite is only really any good on a hull if the hull form and sail plan genuinely allow the boat to take off, and not just form that group of classes commonly called "soakers". I do not mean to be derogatory, about the RS200, RS400 &Co. i.e. all boats whose critical sailplan weight and hull designs (esp. non linear drag hull forms) do not enable the boat to tack downwind to best effect in up to and including marginal planing conditions. I have yet to see a study of the drag form of the latest NS14 hulls, but I presume they also have an S-shape (plot Y axis drag , X axis speed). You just have to look at the power needed in many to get on the plane to realise how many hull forms would be better off being sailed more or less on a dead run. At his point, in marginal planing conditions many owners of asymmetric spi boats start talking about not being "tactical" enough, whatever that means. In mixed fleet racing the crux of the matter IMHO lies more in their current crew weight not supporting full planing at the average wind strength of the day, giving them no advantage VMG-wise tacking downwind (made worse by having in some cases a class-ban on goosewinging). There´s my 0.02 worth. (I feel better now ![]() Edited by Slippery Jim |
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Pass the skiff, man!
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Flick-Flock ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 27 Mar 09 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 102 |
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But sometimes sailing on a dead run is exactly what
people want to get downwind. For example sailing on a small inland pond where there isnt the space use a kite. No matter how efficient the hull, tacking downwind will never give you the best vmg if you have to gybe every 10 seconds. Unless you are very very good at gybing. As for the tactics, surely the boats that are sometimes quicker on a dead run, and sometimes quicker tacking downwind are more tactical, because it adds the decision of when to switch between modes. Plus sailing to the pressure would be more beneficial as it could make the difference between planing or not. Thats the way i see it anyway |
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Swimming after Laser 5000 5069
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Slippery Jim ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Nov 09 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 586 |
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I can understand that. You are not saying anything contradictory to what I say. As for tactics, I think you mean boats which cannot efficiently (VMG wise) tack downwind in marginal conditions choose to dead run it. They are the "soakers" that I describe. Some, like the RS200 are not allowed to effectively dead run it, since they are not allowed to goosewing. As for the linear drag boats, their crews just learn to gybe faster and the VMG stays good. |
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Pass the skiff, man!
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JimC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Online Posts: 6662 |
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The only time I've ever seen or heard the phrase used in that context was in Bethwaite! I do think he exaggerates the situation even though I can imagine running against a strong tide not being the strongest point of the RS200 performance envelope. I've had this discussion with him by email though and we've agreed to disagree! My feeling is that setting the boat up so it is *always* faster to gybe downwind in any conditions means that you have to make too many compromises in other areas, especially with moderate performance boats. I've also found that the asymettric allows you to exploit the "gust fan" much better than a pole or no kite, which means that in the real world it can work better than it does on paper. Edited by JimC |
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Slippery Jim ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Nov 09 Location: Germany Online Status: Offline Posts: 586 |
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I've heard it from the horse's mouth and his son's (face to face) but also elsewhere, from laser2000 and (ironically) laser4000 sailors and not even in the english language. the choice of phrase is typically bethwaite, but also economical. Yes i do own his book, but there also might even be an element of truth in it too. Edited by Slippery Jim |
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Pass the skiff, man!
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