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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List classes of boat for sale |
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davidyacht ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 29 Mar 05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1345 |
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I suspect the main reason ISOs (and Laser 5000s and possibly 4000s) ended up in the long grass was that they were unsuited to the bits of water people actually sailed on, as well as failing to deliver the skiff performance due to their disappointing weight/power ratio ... on top of that, even the most well designed trapeze assymetric boats are no fun in light winds ... which are the conditions most often encountered in heartlands of UK dinghy sailing.
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Happily living in the past
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davidyacht ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 29 Mar 05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1345 |
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You only have to look at National 12s, Merlin Rockets, I14s and International Moths to bear this out; in these classes twitchy means narrower on the waterline, finer in the ends, which generally results in a faster boat in the more skilled hands ... but you do have to finish to win it!
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Happily living in the past
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Riv ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 23 Nov 13 Location: South Devon Online Status: Offline Posts: 353 |
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iGRF said
"A bad design should not be permitted to shelter under the adjective 'performance This is a useful counterpoint. |
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Mistral Div II prototype board, Original Windsurfer, Hornet built'74.
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eric_c ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 21 Jan 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 382 |
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You only have to look at some modern Merlins sailing on the sea in a decent breeze to see that they are way better at staying in control and making good progress than most 60s designs. The idea that old slow designs are easier to sail in all conditions is basically wrong. The only 'old' design I'd hold in high regard for being able to get a very average sailor safely around in 'far more wind and chop than we were expecting' is a 505. That may be a tidal estuary thing, they are quite special in short wind over tide chop, riding on the flared bits of hull. 14s, I think most people would say the 'modern' crop are more seaworthy than the roundy-hull era? Moths took the narrow waterline to silly extremes pre-foiling and are too short. N12s are too short. The object lesson in slow 'stable' boats which are shockingly squirrelly at speed is probably the Bosun. A merlin feels like a safe warm place after a blast in one of those things.
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JimC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6661 |
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Whilst I don't disagree with the premise that the Topper and Laser asymmetric boats were not very good, I think any hypotheses you come up with need to include the fact that Fireballs and 505s, once among the most popular classes in the country numerically, have similarly disappeared into the long grass and really nothing has replaced them. You can add the Laser 2 to the list too - once a very significant class worldwide and now more or less extinct with nothing apparently replacing it.
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tink ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 23 Jan 16 Location: North Hants Online Status: Offline Posts: 789 |
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I always sort the PY by returns. The fireball is the first boat with a Trapeze early teens a few years ago more recently late teens. Obviously only represents club racing
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Tink
https://tinkboats.com http://proasail.blogspot.com |
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eric_c ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 21 Jan 18 Online Status: Offline Posts: 382 |
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I don't think that's got much to do with them being easy or hard to sail More to do with the performance you get for your money. Both classes have focussed on international competition, and in 505's that doesn't come cheap. Fireballs lost a generation of sailors to asy classes, which deliver the same speed in less wind. When you look at club PY fleets and clubs' tendencies to race or not in light/heavy conditions, I don't see a lot of opportunities where a mid-price Fireball or 505 would be the right answer. Then there's the issue of the PY being driven down by the sailmakers who race shiny high tech new ones. Basically it's not the 70s or 80s any more and the days of an open meeting most weekends ithe 'season' have gone for most classes. As for the Laser 2, you might as well ask why we don't drive Austin Montegos any more. Worldwide numbers were never that impressive anyway, give that a lot were not owned by actual individual sailors. You can buy one for buttons now, but why would you? As a boat they were pretty crap, but they gave affordable level OD racing for their 20 minutes of fame. The people L2's were targetted at might be sailing RS200s, RS500s, 29ers, other stuff outside Englandshire? How do worldwide 420 sales compare with the L2?
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423zero ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 08 Jan 15 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 3420 |
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56,000 420's. 10,500 Laser 2.
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Robert
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Grumpycat ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 29 Sep 20 Online Status: Offline Posts: 497 |
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I have no idea about the wider sailing world . But certainly at my club all types of crewed boats are on the decline. We are down to two enterprises and a n12.
The move to singlehanders at smaller clubs seems unstoppable. Is this trend the same at other clubs ? Edited by Grumpycat - 08 Mar 22 at 7:36am |
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The Q ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 07 Feb 22 Location: Norfolk Broads Online Status: Offline Posts: 126 |
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My main club went down to almost no dinghies about 20 years ago , having had a big enterprise Fleet and a variety of other two man boats.
Then they started a sailing school, up to 80 kids on a Thursday afternoon / evening learning to sail.. All volunteer run, so very cheap to learn to sail.. But.. They learn in club Oppies .. single handed, Move on to club toppers .. single handed, Buy their own Splash or Laser single handed. Very few have gone to two person boats. In the old days you learnt by crewing , then getting the offer to sail back to the club at the end of sailing, then sharing the helm then eventually you moved on to your own two man boat. What's keeping the Keelboat fleet alive is adults coming back into sailing or coming to learn in the club Yeomans. Edited by The Q - 08 Mar 22 at 8:25am |
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Still sailing in circles
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