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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List classes of boat for sale |
New ladies skiff |
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alstorer ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 02 Aug 07 Location: Cambridge Online Status: Offline Posts: 2899 |
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(b14 is an oddity- though otherwise we sail rather like most twin trap boats, the jib needs much more attention and has pretty high sheeting loads, so the helm takes the main unless you're French)
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Al |
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fudheid ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 11 Location: 51.53 N 01.28 E Online Status: Offline Posts: 241 |
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Cheers you
only me from over the sea...... |
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tickel ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Dec 05 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 408 |
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Just to make a point. At the RS 800 inlands. 41 boats. 19 girls crewing. 4 helming of which 3 were all girl teams. In no way would I dismiss female helms but would it not be more representative to have mixed skiffs?
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tickel
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Skiffman ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 27 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 291 |
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To reply about the bow, I just do not think it works but I hope I am wrong because it looks great
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Sheetpuller ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 22 Feb 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 114 |
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Actually, going back to the first picture in the OP - I know it's the head of the spinny sticking out of the chute, but it really does look like a hooded figure crouched in some sort of bow station; in which case, the bowsprit could actually be a cannon...Hmm - perhaps there is merit in this new design after all...
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I'm not arguing. I'm explaining why I'm right.
Merlin Rocket 3545 - 'Smooth Operator' Sprint 15 1342 - 'Still Crazy' |
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Sheetpuller ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 22 Feb 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 114 |
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[/QUOTE]As to whether Olympic selection would mean the kiss of death to sales, I wonder if that might not depend on the level of one-design. I recall the 505's actually trying to avoid Olympic selection at one time in order to avoid risking the popularity of the class, while the FD apparently suffered greatly by its selection. But maybe that was just because the Olympic thing drove the spec and costs up - a strict one-design à la Laser would not suffer that effect.[/QUOTE] My impression is that cost increases have little to do with it. I've sailed a couple of olympic classes in my time (Finn and FD) and the feeling I've had is that most 'club' sailors would love to 'have a go', but at the same time feel that such boats are only for the hotshots and that they would not get a look-in. Better to be sailing a non-olympic class and chasing a place in the first half of the fleet than sail an olympic boat and risk being left as a permanent tail-end charlie...or something like that. It's muddled thinking, as demonstrated by the fact that I was never ever a hotshot, but it's there all the same. Just one reason why I think olympic classes should be selected for their popularity; the Laser is a bloody awful piece of work IMO, but at least when ordinary sailing folk see an olympic Laser race they can relate to what's going on. |
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I'm not arguing. I'm explaining why I'm right.
Merlin Rocket 3545 - 'Smooth Operator' Sprint 15 1342 - 'Still Crazy' |
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Chris 249 ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 May 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2041 |
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The sailing equipment looks pretty modern compared to the stuff used in other sports. Javelin - equipment designed between Mycaenean and Roman times, apparently. Performance drastically reduced in the 1960s and 1980s by rule changes, throwers now capable of distances only 80% of those reached in the '60s. Cycling - basic design frozen in the 1930s to reduce speed by about 35% compared to the fastest possible non-Olympic designs, further restrictions regularly introduced to restrict development. Track equipment heavily restricted - no brakes or gears. Ironically, widespread rejoicing when Tour de France speeds are reduced as doping bans take effect. Current Olympic equipment as fast (compared to unlimited designs) as a Laser is compared to a Moth. Rowing - basic design to 1880s rules, major performance-reducing restrictions in 1983 etc, current Olympic equipment 10% slower than the fast possible non-Olympic designs. Swimming - performance-enhancing equipment (fins, streamlined suits etc) banned to reduce performance, strokes restricted to reduce performance. Shooting, archery, canoeing, kayaking all heavily restricted in design and therefore performance. |
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Medway Maniac ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 13 May 05 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 2788 |
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Doesn't this help explain why the dreadnought bow makes sense? If you have to move aft as you do in most boats in order to avoid shipping a chop over the the bow, you increase the drag, notably at the transom. The d- bow appears to enable you to stay forward and just pierce through the waves, not compromising the fore-aft trim. As to whether Olympic selection would mean the kiss of death to sales, I wonder if that might not depend on the level of one-design. I recall the 505's actually trying to avoid Olympic selection at one time in order to avoid risking the popularity of the class, while the FD apparently suffered greatly by its selection. But maybe that was just because the Olympic thing drove the spec and costs up - a strict one-design à la Laser would not suffer that effect. |
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Chris 249 ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 May 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2041 |
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Well said, Sheetpuller!
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Sheetpuller ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 22 Feb 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 114 |
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Looking at the pics in the OP, that hull looks flatter than a flat thing and would be very uncomfortable in a chop. In fact it's so flat it would make Keira Knightley look positively curvacious, and if I have to bounce around on one of them the boat's got no chance...
I seriously doubt there's enough female market base for a boat of this kind. If it's accepted for the Olympics then it will sell to those few individuals who have the time, money and raw talent to realistically contemplate sailing at that level. The history of Olympic classes suggests that selection as an Olympic class inhibits sales to the lesser orders; the exception is the Laser which was a very popular class before it was selected. So rather than designing ever-more esoteric boats that have no relevance to sailing as a world-wide sport, it would be much better if boats were selected for Olympic competition precisely because they reflect what the real world is sailing. That way there might be some real recruitment benefits for the sport as a whole. Edited by Sheetpuller - 24 Oct 11 at 9:56pm |
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