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Singlehanded BOX rule

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Post Options Post Options   Quote sargesail Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Singlehanded BOX rule
    Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 9:33am
Originally posted by pompeysailor

So reading a few posts, and knowing it might have been discussed before, but I will attempt to start the conversation again..

With a little adjusting within each class, "we" could very easily gain a fantastic set of boats which can effectively race against in a "class" without handicap.

Thinking:

* Aero 9
* D-Zero
* Blaze
* Phantom
* RS300
* RS100 8.4
* Farr 3.7
* Laser EPS
* Contender
* A new class built specifically for the BOX rule?

All currently based around an approx. current handicap of 1000 and certainly in different condition each class will rise to the front.

What we need it the classes to agree to a BOX rule and potentially a 'committee' built to adjust the classes to even them out through different means over a period of time.

Everyone likes different boats, but it would help sailing grow knowing that you could have 200+ boats attending a BOX rule nationals..!

Thoughts?..

Thoughts - you'd need a lot of adjusting, not a little, to get close racing.  Or you could just change the laws of physics.  There are just 3 potentially winning boats in there.  You'd have to add a lot of weight/remove a lot of rag/take of the trapeze to change that.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 9:52am
It stands to reason that the cheapest boats sell in the biggest numbers. However, that does not mean they are necessarily the most profitable for the builder or the best to sail for the purchaser.

I'm not sure you could get everything from a Contender to an Aero to a RS100 within the same box and to race off scratch, but the idea of amalgamating at least some class into super classes is worthwhile. Whether you limit it initially to centre toe strap boats, or offer scratch and PY racing simultaneously I don't know.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Cirrus Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 10:21am
Is this not already happening  ?  Many of the larger Summer sailing weeks etc group boats together for common starts across a specified but limited range of handicaps .... They are there if you want them. 

Fleet racing is very widely available for those prepared to 'get out' there at class Opens and championships ... and there is positively no shortage of general handicap racing for the rest of the time, at clubs and 'out there' some of it arranged in groupings based on a specified handicap range - this is not new.   Box rules for singlehanders ?  This will not necessarily mean more people out there racing plus yacht racing demonstrates just how tedious the rules and handicapping can eventually get ... and designs emerging to 'beat' the box rules that while they may be slightly faster are possibly not as nice, accesible, sensibly durable or cost-effective to race.  

Racing together ?  You mean like at POSH for example maybe - well it is fine as it is already imo and there could be more examples. 

A drive to a new (effectively development) box class though is far more ambitious and therefore far far less likely to succeed.   I'd argue that any drive to boost numbers should be aimed towards persuading more to simply race locally every weekend at their clubs and to also to make a few more 'away' trips each season.  Get off the keyboards and get out there !


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Post Options Post Options   Quote Do Different Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 10:30am
Is there anything to be learnt from motorsport? Seems to me there are more similarities in that area  than athletics & cycling. Very equipment based with many classes and attractive to techy types and garage fettlers.

Obviously I am not talking high end formulas but clubman racing in all it's many guises. I believe several classes commonly run in one race for both class and overall honours. You also see lots of older designs running, yes tricked to whatever the rules allow, does anyone call an Escort Mexico a lipstick pig?

  
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Post Options Post Options   Quote iGRF Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 10:46am
Originally posted by Rupert

So the F18 has worked because it has to be quite heavy and use a tin mast (does it still?) and the F16, which uses exotics and is very light is failing.

Can we Dinghy sailors learn a lesson from this? Actually, judging by this forum, most of us know this, and just have to put up with a few oddballs telling us we are dinosaurs and that all will be well with sailing if we simply throw away everything we are currently using. Magically, the sport will then grow.


You are all dinosaurs, but that doesn't mean you should be discarded, thrown away on a scrap heap, no you should provide the base upon which the future could be built, taking all the knowledge of what went wrong in the recent past, avoiding it, yet providing a groundwork for the future, some sailing scenario in which our brightest and best can showcase our sport to the world, with a product that is readily available from more than one supplier, easily accessible to future aspirants, that's what we should be striving for. [Edit: Fundamental Box rule test; as well as mast height, length, beam, limitations, when left alone on the water it shouldn't fall over]

Originally posted by Do Different

iGRF. You may be annoying, argumentative, cranky, a conspiracy theorist and sometimes just plain wrong  but I take my hat off to your work rate and genuine enthusiasm. 
I hope being busy at work is also being profitable, I wish you a happy Christmas and a fruitful New Year.  Beer


Why thank you, were that it was profitable just yet, two complete business start ups in a flat market, but I'm making progress thanks and happy Christmas and prosperous new year back to you and us all..

Edited by iGRF - 19 Dec 15 at 10:59am
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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 11:15am
Originally posted by Peaky

It stands to reason that the cheapest boats sell in the biggest numbers.

Don't think its true though. The Laser was not a cheap boat when it came out, but immediately sold in barrow loads. There have been any number of attempts to build cheaper boats, both within classes and as new classes which haven't come off.

There's a tendency for cheaper boats to sell more than more expensive boats of course, but I suggest that any suggestion of cheap [and nasty] is death. I don't spend a lot of (well any!) time studying sales theory, but ISTR I've heard it said that a product can be too cheap as well as too expensive.

Edited by JimC - 19 Dec 15 at 11:18am
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Post Options Post Options   Quote ventus Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 2:25pm
Originally posted by JimC

Originally posted by Peaky

It stands to reason that the cheapest boats sell in the biggest numbers.

Don't think its true though. The Laser was not a cheap boat when it came out, but immediately sold in barrow loads. There have been any number of attempts to build cheaper boats, both within classes and as new classes which haven't come off.

There's a tendency for cheaper boats to sell more than more expensive boats of course, but I suggest that any suggestion of cheap [and nasty] is death. I don't spend a lot of (well any!) time studying sales theory, but ISTR I've heard it said that a product can be too cheap as well as too expensive.


The boats that sell the best tend to be the ones that forfill the equation, performance versus cost/value versus ease of use, with the added proviso of adding a big enough profit margin for the builder to survive.

Think the last class to manage this was the rs200 and that's quite a long time ago now.
Hope the aero or maybe the zero might manage it.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote craiggo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Dec 15 at 7:11pm
Originally posted by Do Different

Is there anything to be learnt from motorsport? Seems to me there are more similarities in that area  than athletics & cycling. Very equipment based with many classes and attractive to techy types and garage fettlers.
Obviously I am not talking high end formulas but clubman racing in all it's many guises. I believe several classes commonly run in one race for both class and overall honours. You also see lots of older designs running, yes tricked to whatever the rules allow, does anyone call an Escort Mexico a lipstick pig?
  


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Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 Dec 15 at 11:19am
The thing about motorsport, though, is that it's not a very big participant sport, considering that most adults already know the basic technique in some way (ie most people can and do drive, far fewer can and do sail or ski, etc) and the enormous amount of high- and low-level sponsorship available from the enormous parent industry. 

Given that one of the world's biggest industries spends stupid amounts of money on motorsport, all the way from F1 down to the local muffler installer who gives a 2CV racer a good deal, you could argue it should be one of the world's biggest participants sports.  Instead it's not much more popular than sailing in much of the English speaking world, so maybe it's not doing very well at attracting participants?

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 Dec 15 at 11:25am
Originally posted by pompeysailor

Do we have any F18 sailors who can shed light on why the F18 class works so well??

I've only done one F18 regatta but I did interview a bunch of the leading Australian Formula guys on F18s and F16s for an article.  The thing that strikes me about the F18, in comparison with the existing dinghy development classes, is that it compromises performance to reduce costs and increase ease of handling, and to make it easy for volume builders to compete.  Current dinghy classes like Merlins and NS14s arguably don't do it that way; they are aimed more at the bespoke builder and the sailor who likes a very sensitive boat.

A box singlehanded dinghy that followed the F18 concept would perhaps be 60+kg and quite beamy, which seems to be a different recipe to the current successes in that sphere.
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