Laser 140101 Tynemouth |
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Laser 28 - Excellent example of this great design Hamble le rice |
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Rossiter Pintail Mortagne sur Gironde, near Bordeaux |
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Latest legal Laser tweaks???? |
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Chris 249 ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 May 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2041 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 19 Jun 14 at 6:21am |
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For a start, it's not an indictment of the sport if the gear stays roughly the same - that's what it does in many other leisure pursuits doesn't it? Cricket bats, recorders, acoustic guitars, chess pieces, X One Designs.... not everyone gets caught up in the consumerist stuff that (as studies on happiness show) don't actually make people much happier. Hipsters around my city are still looking for old steel fixed-gear bikes, wearing tee shirts of '70s bands and playing SNES as much as the latest games. And the area of sailing that changed the most (windsurfing) also faded the most which hardly makes that a great model to follow. I sail and love development classes but the fact is that change is NOT needed for survival. One proof of that is that the very first International dinghy class (the Int 12) has been looking to become an official International class once again; it's just got to sort out whether to allow fibreglass first! The fact that the ex-Int 12 is getting very strong and growing fleets despite being still gaff rigged and (in Holland) still made in mahogany shows pretty eloquently that major change is not vital. By the way, the oldest OD design of all (the North Haven Dinghy) is also still sailing. Secondly, in some ways the Laser has developed vastly more than other classes. The adoption of the Radial and 4.7 were significant changes - how many other classes have changed their sail area, a basic parameter of design, so much? More importantly the Laser has lead the way in "user changes"; that is making fundamental changes in its audience rather than fiddling with trinkets. I think it was the first class to really get Masters racing going. It was one of the first classes to hold world titles for women, and it opened itself up from being mainly about young men to being about everyone from sub juniors to great grand masters. It's a major class when new countries are moving into the sport, and the most popular subject for scientific study into the physical side of sailing. All of those things are major areas of "software" development. Arguably the enormous changes that the Laser has made in widening its appeal are more important, sweeping and better for the sport than the sort of fiddling with layups and controls that many "progressive" classes are making. In a way it's an echo of what occurred in the US in the '30s with the Snipe and in the UK in the '50s and '60s with the Beecher Moore boats - a huge change in users which is arguably a much bigger development than a change of sailcloth or cockpit. Edited by Chris 249 - 19 Jun 14 at 6:24am |
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iiitick ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 04 Jun 14 Location: gb Online Status: Offline Posts: 478 |
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This may all be true Chris but double handed sailing is less popular than it was anyway. Many of the single handed classes you quote are also dated and declining. It is the 'new' batch of designs that show the way. In our little club members vote with their feet which is why we have 14 nova's active and only 2 Lasers. 15 years ago the club was made up of GP 14's and Lasers, not now, times change. I still maintain that the Olympic effect keeps the Laser alive. Until recently no designer or manufacturer even tried to attack them choosing to develop boats for slightly different niche groups.
Even I am getting fed up with this topic now!
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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 fact that the Laser is the only popular Olympic boat class makes it pretty clear that Olympic status is not propping it up. The Laser and Radial sit right at the top of the pile in terms of numbers of boats sailing at national titles (once you add in those who just did the Masters nationals)* and in yardstick races, so obviously they are highly representative. The class has been "attacked" many times; from its very first regatta it was up against similar craft from other manufacturers, some of them backed by vast multinationals (Chrysler, aerospace/defence contractor AMG, Yamaha, etc). In most countries those challenges are long gone. To many eyes even a Supernova looks ancient compared to a foiler Moth or kiteboard but if you love it that's great and I'm not going to sl*g off your class or its sailors - if you and other people gave Laser sailors the same respect then you wouldn't end up getting fed up with our defence of our class. * behind only the Topper and Opti, with the big rig equal to the Solo once those who sail only Masters nationals are taken into account.
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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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In the past I have owned and sailed 3 L*sers. Racing them at club and local open events, one nationals and one inlands. I have also owned and sailed moths (low riders back when), Int Canoe, Blaze and multiple two-handed, inc MR's and N12s. Now I happily own and sail an RS100.
I can hand-on-heart say that the only aspect of L*ser ownership; owning, storing, rigging, sailing, racing, tweaking, maintaining, updating etc.. that was any where near as 'satisfying' as the other classes, was the racing. Now, I simply come from the point-of-view that the best single-hander choice would be a more modern design, which offers the same type of racing experiences as the Laser can. I just don't like it, that in the 2010's we are being told that we should be forced to accept the 'foibles' of such an old design, simply to enjoy 'big fleet' racing.
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kneewrecker ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 09 Apr 14 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1586 |
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dirty feckin' hipsters.... total not mainstream and consumerist in their outlook. 10 to the dozen in Hoxton, but man, yeah, so like, original. The 1970's band t-shirts, printed in a Chinese export processing zone; the original converse (sure, they're not just old ones from 2006 someone's pulled out a recycle bin); the stylised norcal beards..... all work a treat in the non-consumerist world of a social media consultancy or a crowd-source funded micro engineering business.... Edited by kneewrecker - 19 Jun 14 at 8:03am |
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GarethT ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 714 |
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No one is forcing anyone to do anything. If enough people bought one of the new designs, there would be big fleets. I'm guessing (no real evidence to back it up) that the early adopters in one new class may become the early adopters in a subsequent newer design, so whilst 'progress' is happening and more new sexy designs come out, none of them will ever get the critical mass to have a big fleet circuit to rival the establish classes as chunk of the fleet will always move on to the next big thing. Nothing wrong with that, but it just means that those that are after a large fleet circuit will stay with the Laser and Solo.
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GarethT ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 714 |
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Were you listening to Radio 4 on the way home yesterday?
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Andy K ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 03 Jun 14 Location: C I Online Status: Offline Posts: 5 |
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All well and good, guys.
But still no answers. Where the heck can a new starter get the info to sort out the L*aser modifications. I continue to look, but clarity is sadly lacking |
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GarethT ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 714 |
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Well, to fit them there are instructions in the box.
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blaze720 ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 28 Sep 05 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1635 |
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This would not even warrant a discussion if all was 100% well ..... In many markets and regions it is not.
The defenders see no or little problem ... and of course they are unlikely to do so ... and neither do the producers. So thats that then ! There is nothing wrong and all the 'knockers' are doing trying to put the class down.... But many are not attacking the class at all. Many of us remember what the Laser was 'in the day'. It was totally dominant and we would argue that it helped dinghy sailing along. It could still be there .... If the defenders are correct then the Laser will recover that position in all markets without change ... and if they are not then presumably the makers will get blamed.. 'Mature' products make the most money usually and become the milkers for cash so the maker should be fine for nowand those consumers happy with the status quo will never see the traffic coming the other way anyway. This one will run and run .... Mike L. |
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