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    Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 12:55pm
Cherubs and Moths both publish numbers for older boats. The Cherub ones at least are based on what the published number was when the boats were new, with divisions based on major design innovations and rule changes.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote jeffers Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 12:58pm
As do the Merlins and N12s.

It is up to the boat owner to speak to their sailing committee if they wish them to be used (and be prepared to be told no).
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Time Lord Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 2:07pm
Originally posted by Punky

The hull shape rules for the Merlin haven't changed in yonks, it is just designs getting better.  Therefore it is not much different to playing with tolerances on Fireballs, Streakers etc.   


There is a considerable difference between hull shapes in Merlins than simply playing the tolerances. As an example, the main difference between a Winder Canterbury Tales mod 2 and mod4 is that the bow has been dropped by 3 inches - hardly playing the tolerances!

I agree that the main rules governing hull shape eg overall length, maximum overall width and waterline width have not changed for many years BUT you can change the hull shape a heck of a lot within those limits compared with the minimal tweaks that can be achieved by playing with tolerances.

Take a look some time at a Canterbury Tales and an older design from the 1980s or earlier. The Tales will have much less rocker and a wider flatter stern to assist earlier planing.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Rupert Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 2:12pm
Originally posted by Time Lord

 

Take a look some time at a Canterbury Tales and an older design from the 1980s or earlier. The Tales will have much less rocker and a wider flatter stern to assist earlier planing.


That would suggest to me that inland, on a tree-lined, weed infested lake, where, according to some on here, all the returns come from, the older boats with more pinched in sterns and greater rocker might actually be faster, so causing even more confusion as to where your CA approved PY bandings should be.

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Time Lord Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 2:31pm
Just to stir things up, what I would like to see are three PNs for each boat split into a) the open sea b) large open waters c) small inland restricted waters of less than say 100 acres.

Will probably be told that there is not sufficient data but you never know..
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Noah Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 2:49pm
Originally posted by Time Lord


There is a considerable difference between hull shapes in Merlins than simply playing the tolerances. As an example, the main difference between a Winder Canterbury Tales mod 2 and mod4 is that the bow has been dropped by 3 inches - hardly playing the tolerances!


Is that 3" a height reduction in the stemhead (i.e. less sheerline, I think that's the term), or dropping the forefoot 3" further into the water? In my poor befuddled head the former will make little difference to boatspeed, while the latter will have all sorts of impacts...

Or perhaps both - taking rocker out - again, a big speed impact I would think...

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Time Lord Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 3:08pm
Dropping the forefoot further into the water - it does have an effect.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Punky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 3:12pm

3" is precision engineering in the world of Fireballs! Wink

I guess I just can't see why the owner of an outdated Merlin is any more entitled to an amended handicap than the the owner of a Bladerider is, for example. 
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Rupert Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 3:46pm
Originally posted by Punky

3" is precision engineering in the world of Fireballs! Wink

I guess I just can't see why the owner of an outdated Merlin is any more entitled to an amended handicap than the the owner of a Bladerider is, for example. 


All a matter of philosophy, I suppose. One view is that what boat you choose is up to you, and if you choose a 70's Merlin or Solo, expect do do in handicap racing as well as you would in class racing.

Another is that in handicap racing, we have the chance to handicap within classes, so why not give a Smoker's Satisfaction Merlin Rocket design its own handicap? To do this might require help from the CA, as the returns going back to the PYAG don't distinguish between designs.

Of course, the latter approach then runs into lots of practical problems, ranging from finding an average amount slower the boat might be to what to do if the boat has been modified.

Take that one step further, and you might ask whether an old Holt GRP Solo could be set its own handicap, given that it is far slower than the modern version. Call it a "Holt GRP Solo" if you like, and issue an experimental number, see how it goes.

The advantage of that approach is that each boat should get a handicap nearer its true potential, and we are therefore looking at sailor skill to find a winner.

The counter argument is that why should someone in a £200 clunker expect to do well?

The cvrda is set up for £200 clunkers - and £200 clunkers that people have spent 100s of hours and £ turning back into things of beauty, but which will still be only the speed they were when new, all those years before.

I'm not sure the latter approach works in the wider world, but the middle approach has some merit. Experimental numbers, rather than ones set in stone from the CA, are the way to go, though. - after all, if the CA says that the handicap for Merlin No6 is -100 off the new one, or whatever, what happens when the new one changes? Fair in a way, as the PY is an average of all the boats, but unfair in other ways. Better, therefore, for the Merlin (pre-amalgamation) to have an EN, and for owners to compare notes on how handicaps and results at clubs are going.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote iGRF Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Mar 14 at 3:56pm
Originally posted by Rupert


The counter argument is that why should someone in a £200 clunker expect to do well?The cvrda is set up for £200 clunkers - and £200 clunkers that people have spent 100s of hours and £ turning back into things of antiquity, but which will still be only the speed they were when new, all those years before.


ftfy

Edited by iGRF - 14 Mar 14 at 3:56pm
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