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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Tacking etiquette .. |
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Brass ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 24 Mar 08 Location: Australia Online Status: Offline Posts: 1151 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 07 Sep 20 at 11:11pm |
Indeed, P needs to be mentally prepared to respond, just as she needed to be while she was windward give way on the same tack, but she is not required to take any physical action whatsoever until S reaches her close hauled course, except possibly to keep watching S, to detect that moment, otherwise, the first action might be to give preparatory verbal instructions to her crew, without any actual movement, as long as movement followed. Crew can remain fully hiked, runner hands not in station, sheets cleated off (if that's the way your roll). But note, depending on the boat and the conditions, tacking all standing without releasing the headsail might be perfectly seamanlike. Edited by Brass - 07 Sep 20 at 11:14pm |
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Rupert ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 11 Aug 04 Location: Whitefriars sc Online Status: Offline Posts: 8956 |
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The difference between rules and tactics. If they are far enough to leeward to make a tack dodgy but possible, as windward boat crack off a couple of degrees and close the gap enough that a tack isn't an option. Then tack when you want to. |
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Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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giraffe ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 10 May 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 148 |
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There is no etiquette. There are rules. You are either the keep clear boat or right of way. In this scenario the boat wanting to tack is required to keep clear. Slow down and then tack and go behind would be the obvious solution. If the other boat is going the wrong way you will overtake them...
Edited by giraffe - 08 Sep 20 at 5:26pm |
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Oinks ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 24 Oct 14 Location: Bandol Online Status: Offline Posts: 267 |
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So, quick question (cos I think I've done it)...so you are watching the boat to leeward who might be getting ready to tack onto Stbd...so you foot off a bit and try to close the gap so that they can't tack, complete, and allow time and opportunity. Is that legal?
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Sam.Spoons ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 07 Mar 12 Location: Manchester UK Online Status: Offline Posts: 3400 |
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Yes, you have to keep clear as they are RoW boat but as long as you do so you are free to sail any course you choose. In practice the advisability or not of doing so would depend how far apart you were and how far ahead they were. RoW has two choices, foot off a little to gain room to tack and hope to put you about or tack and duck your stern hoping you'd overstated and they'd get to the mark first.
Yup... Edited by Sam.Spoons - 08 Sep 20 at 6:01pm |
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Spice 346 "Flat Broke"
Blaze 671 "supersonic soap dish" |
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Mozzy ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 20 Online Status: Offline Posts: 209 |
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Pretty standard tactics approaching a starboard layline on port.
If the leeward boat is too close to the windward boat, so they cannot complete the tack to starboard, then this gives the windward boat freedom to hold the leeward boat beyond the layline and make the tack to starboard when they have a comfortable lay.
The leeward boat has two tactical options to combat this. 1) Luff aggressively (assuming overlap established from behind) so that the windward boat tacks off before the lay. This only works from a long way out, or if there is significant starboard still to do and not a lot of boats on the lay. 2) Foot off to create enough gap so that a tack can completed (sometimes called 'gaping off'. The leeward boat is then free to tack on a layline which suits them. The windward boat will then have decision to tack under and tight on the lay, or duck, concede position, but sail a safer layline. You can see this play out from 5:50 onward in this video 5:55 we tack on a port boats leebow, for a long port approach to the windward mark. I was hoping to leebow them and pinch up, then tack clear ahead on to starboard at the layline. up to 7:12 I try to squeeze them out, but it doesn't work. 7:12 onwards they are controlling in that I can't complete a tack to starboard, they hold us out past the layline. Perhaps I should have footed off to create a tacking gap, but in this instance it would have meant going out in to more current. So I just accept them holding us out past the layline. Lesson really was to have crossed them a 5:40 and been the inside boat in less current. |
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andymck ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 15 Dec 06 Location: Stamford Online Status: Offline Posts: 397 |
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The big lesson is also you are usually racing against a fleet not an individual, two boats can go faster by ignoring the boat on boat tactics till the last round. Concentrate on your strategy against the fleet.
As soon as you are pinching to lee bow, you may both be slow. But not gaining on each other. Whereas conceding that they are in the better position and both sailing fast may gain more places. Andy |
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Andy Mck
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iGRF ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 07 Mar 11 Location: Hythe Online Status: Offline Posts: 6499 |
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Wise words. |
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