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What classes will survive ?

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Chris 249 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: What classes will survive ?
    Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 1:47am
Originally posted by NickA

It's not just speed, is it.  It's the fact that the 29er has
a modern gust responsive rig, is properly designed for trapezing and
performing quick maneouvres, that it's a good training boat for "proper"
skiffs.  Also it will plane up wind if you get it right, which means there is
a tactical choice between footing off and planing vs heading up at hull
speed, which I don't think exists on the 420 tugboat.


If speed's your thing it beats a 420 hands down of course, but for
tactical racing I'd think it was more interesting too.


If you plan to grow into a 470 (why would you) or a 5o5 (and why
wouldn't you) then I guess the 420 has its place.  But better still to get
your dad to buy a 5o5 or a Javelin (that's a european javelin, not one our
your antipodean ones!).


And as for oppies & toppers .... don't get me started  



LONG POST 'CAUSE IT'S A COMPLICATED SUBJECT

I suppose this gets down a personal thing - do you just assume that fast
boats are the future despite the fact that not that many people choose to
sail them, or do you assume that the best path for sailing is illustrated by
looking at the classes that people actually choose to sail?

Personally, I think the latter is best and it also respects more people.
Sailors are not stupid. Unless we think the vast (and growing) majority
who choose to sail slow boats are ignorant, fools, or corwards, we have to
accept that they choose to sail RS200s etc in big numbers because those
boats suit what they want from their sport.

A few comments

1- The 29er has a 'modern gust responsive rig' because it suits its style -
Julian B actually says that a more stable boat like a 420/470 is actually
better off with the rig it's got.

2- As has been pointed out, the 420 has an upwind planing groove as
well.

3- Off topic a bit, but I dunno about the tactics; my singlehanders range
from F16 type cat to a Radial, and I find the tactics involved in DDW to be
about as important as in tacking downwind, with the added spice of
surfing.

Sure, people find apparent-wind tactics are fascinating (and they are) but
IMHO part of the fascination comes from the novelty we get when we
move from the normal DDW classes into apparent-wind boats. It's just
something new, rather than a case where apparent-wind tactics are
inherently more interesting. I've been in classes where rule and wind
changes have switched the craft from DDW specialists to apparent-wind
machines and vice-versa, and from my angle I can't see why either one is
superior.

4- The 29er isn't really an argument for more radical boats, because it's
not quick, light, modern, radical, or high tech for a 14 foot long skiff
type. Julian and his partners de-tuned it to make it suitable for more
sailors, and it's a great boat. It's just at a different point on the spectrum
to the 420, but neither of them are close to the extremes, because the
extremes do not attract many sailors. Even in the Aussie Skiff classes and
the development cat classes, the least extreme boats are the most
popular.

5- BTW, the 505 and UK Jav seem to be actually slower, compared to the
Bethwaite equivalent, than the 420 'tugboat' is compared to its Bethwaite
equivalent. What's slower than a tugboat? A barge?

Yet 505s and UK Javs are GREAT boats, so it can't all be about pace.

One thing that's interesting about 505s is that back in the mid '70s, they
ranked in the top 10 of the Y&Y Nationals Attendance Table. The 'Ball was
about 3rd. The average speed of the boats in the top 10 of the Table was
at its peak and (IIRC from the time I was researching it) they were quicker
than the top 10 in earlier times or today. And yet just at the time that the
average speed of the top 10 classes reached its peak (at a time when
boards and cats were still very much in the minority), dinghy sailing
started its long slump in popularity. So having lots and lots of faster boats
certainly didn't help dinghy sailing back then.

6- I'd rather my nephews were sailing Toppers, than selling their high-
tech, fiddly expensive 'little skiffs' as they are doing. Our eldest started
off in Tornadoes, did a couple of nationals in an F16 type cat (fastest 16
footer in the world at the time) and at 18 he hasn't stepped on a boat for
years. These are only personal tales, yet they repeat the message that the
facts - the sheer hard numbers of the classes that people sail - tell us
time and time again. People do not prefer faster classes. IMHO those who
abuse slower boats are hurting the sport they love.





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Chris 249 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Chris 249 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 2:37am
Originally posted by getafix


Originally posted by NickA

If you plan to grow into a 470 (why would you) or a 5o5
(and why wouldn't you) then I guess the 420 has its place. 

...
where is that exactly, at the back of the boat park sprouting weeds? as an
interesting roundabout decoration? or perhaps as a reminder to the yoofs
of what boats used to look like?... the 420 is a dinosaur from another age



just like the oppie, mirror, 470, topper, finn, star, yngling, hobie 16, and
even the laser is pretty aged. (worrying how many of these remain
olympic classes)... now all these are very popular and I don't dispute offer
excellent fleet racing, tuning and training and have excellent class assoc's
- I offer no argument to these points, I will even concede that in the right
conditions they are (relatively) exciting... but I just can't see another sport
where youngsters who aspire to the top are given such ancient tools to
practice on......

I can't see another sport with expensive equipment that is as popular
as sailing


it must turn yoof sailors off (or at least it did until some genius came in
with the 29er), if you turned up to a cycle road-racing event this
weekend as a 14yr old and were given a 1950's bike you'd be pretty
miffed, especially if someone parked a 2000's carbon racing machine
near you,

Looking at the reality, there's no indication that the slow boats turn
off any more kids than the equivalent fast boats.

About bikes - I checked the figures a while back. There's 1.7 million
bikes sold in the UK each year, many of them are high-performance
types, and yet there's only 10,000 members of the bike-racing
federation. The sport of bike racing is much worse than sailing, when it
comes to turning people onto competition.

Looking at the reality, it seems that lots of kids could be getting turned
off bike racing by the fact that their affordable bike looks outmoded
alongside the carbon bikes of other people. Sailing, on the numbers, is
doing it better than bike racing so why use them as an example of the
better route?


or if a 12yr old turned up to go-karting to find a collection of 60's-70's
throw-back machines parked on the grid - "sorry kids, no pretending to
be Lewis Hamilton today, who's heard of Sterling Moss or Jackie Stewart?"

I don't know much about Karting, but it's interesting to see that many
of the kid's classes have restrictive rules, and that as far as my inexpert
eye sees, they look just like karts did when I was a kid.

However, the significant point is that, for all the enormous size of the
motor industry and the vast funds it throws into motorsport, in both our
countries motor racing attracts no more participants than sailing does.

Down here in the year 2000, motor racing got $460 million of
sponsorship, mostly from within its huge parent industry. Today that
would be something like the equivalent of 250 million pounds in a
country of 20 million.

Yet for all these rivers of gold, motorsports attract no more participants
than sailing. Imagine what we could do with 250 million pounds and a
huge TV presence like motor racing!

The fact that massive sponsorship for motor racing doesn't translate into
bigger entry lists surely demonstrates that the way they organise their
sport is not as efficient (for participants) as the way we run ours.


i'd like to see is a yoof single hander that really set the pace going ...
something like a lighter hull-weight, smaller rig Blaze? or a "winged"
light-weight Vareo type thing with an assy? ... I'm guessing some thing
that will perform on a pond as well as be stable but still relatively high
performance for open water will go down well, wings, flexi-rigs and open
cockpits are also bound to be popular? 

I actually think that there are a few yoof sailable cats that look the part,
and a few two-handers, but strangely no "high performance" single
handers.....

The Moth's surely as quick as you can get, and it works for
lightweights, yet the fleet and class numbers in the UK seem to have
grown very little, if at all, recently. Same as the cats - if so many people
wanted them then why don't they sail them?

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 9:27am
This argument is really only about two sorts of boat, displacement hulls
v's planing hulls.

For a class to survive long term imo it requires a hull shape that works
across the full gamut of conditions. Drifter thru gliding into planing and
to be able to continue that planing momentum even when it has to be up
short steep hills.

Now some displacement hulls do plane as well, but there are very few if
any flat skiffy hulls that work in displacement conditions and
unfortunately most clubs and club sailing is time driven rather than
condition.

So having lashed out on the latest and greatest only to have some grey
haired fox in an old displacement tub, totally destroy that fragile young
ego is my guess as to what happens all to often at Club Level, it certainly
occurs at ours.

My guess is it also happens with older egos, sailing may be more about
the participation than the end result, but unless a sense of personal
achievement by progress to the occasional top end position occurs, then
apathy soon turns to absense, which is always the limiting factor of OD
racing eventually.

Chasing planing only performance is what killed competitive windsurfing
and there was a time when our numbers far exceeded dinghy turnouts,
and if you remember it wasn't so long ago I pointed out the relative joy of
gybing a 49er, was going in exactly the same direction, face it, however
much they might have howled at that thread, the simple fact was, very
very good sailors with a lot more experience than the average desk
jockey and weekend warrior couldn't handle them so where is their
aftermarket?

If there is no aftermarket once the high end guys finish, then there is no
class future. I do remember wondering in the days I struggled with that
other "performance stallion" the MPS, if they had fitted it with floats on
the racks or the racks could have been wider, or both, maybe my 65 kgs
could have eventually mastered it, but whatever, it's academic now and
both my and the classes loss. The fact I couldn't and since I've mastered
just about everything else I've attempted in life doesn't bode well for large
numbers in the future.

So my point?

The future will be the province of boats that can take all conditions by as
wide a range of sailor skills as possible and I hope in two days time the
first of that new generation will deliver exactly that to an excited new
owner.

I can't wait and am counting the hours...

Edited by G.R.F
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Post Options Post Options   Quote NeilP Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 9:51am

Here's a radical idea: instead of spernding your lives worrying about whether a I14 is more exciting than a Cherub, or where the next best thing is coming from, try looking at the past and learning some lessons. Despite the scorn poured upon it by this forum, the 470 has survived for over 40 years and the FD still gets 80+ boats at a Europeans over 55 years after the first one was built. If you're all as clever as you think you are, you might draw a comparison with many of the SMOD's and perhaps come to the conclusion that the older classes were doing something right after all. IMHO, what they are doing is offering challenging and exciting sailing across a huge range of wind strengths and sea states. The older "dinosaurs" are in fact, if you take the assy blinkers off, great boats. The 470 may not be fast by modern standards, but who cares? Nobody could go sailing in a newish, well set-up 470 and come back saying it's not a great boat. Open your eyes people, stop worrying about how modern or fast your boat is. Pick a class you like, with people you like and actually spend some time (years, maybe!!!) learning what makes it go. I promise you'll be a better sailor, waste less money and maybe even have more fun! That's what I did nearly 15 years ago, and nothing short of old age and physical disintegration will get me out of my boat now. I don't care if the UK dinghy scene's chattering classes think it's a dinosaur. It's my dinosaur.

One size does not fit all

No FD? No Comment!
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Post Options Post Options   Quote winging it Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 10:18am




just thought we needed some visual light relief...
the same, but different...

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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 10:42am
Originally posted by winging it

I can't understand why there is still such a gap in the market.

Most times there's a gap in the market is because no-one wants a boat that fills it...
A few years ago I built a quickish singlehander and put together a set of development rules. There was no box rule singlehanded class for the heavier sailor back then. So it was a gap in the market was it? Well, as no-one else ever really showed any serious interest in building one there wasn't a market full stop...

Worldwide I know of one real lightweights singlehanded trapeze boat, the Farr 3.7 in NZ. Owning, as I do, a boat with a very similar hull, I can be pretty confident its a delight to sail. Why are there none outside New Zealand? Because no-one wants one I reckon.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Jack Sparrow Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 10:48am
The answer to this thread is a social economic and physiological one, mixed with a governing body class support.

The classes that will survive are the classes that reflect to mood of the relevant cultures that they exist in, and the amount of support they get from governing bodies / external sources.

Fast skiff types do an important job for the sport in terms of aspiration.

The slower displacement types provide real world use for most at a level of commitment / fitness that is achievable.

The other consideration is suitability to the prevailing sailing conditions.

But within these considerations there will be winners and losers.

And that is down to the ability to response to conditions presented to each class at any given time.

( I'll get back to this latter got to do something now.... )
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Post Options Post Options   Quote winging it Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 11:02am
Originally posted by JimC

Originally posted by winging it

I can't understand why there is still such a gap in the market.

Most times there's a gap in the market is because no-one wants a boat that fills it...
A few years ago I built a quickish singlehander and put together a set of development rules. There was no box rule singlehanded class for the heavier sailor back then. So it was a gap in the market was it? Well, as no-one else ever really showed any serious interest in building one there wasn't a market full stop...

Worldwide I know of one real lightweights singlehanded trapeze boat, the Farr 3.7 in NZ. Owning, as I do, a boat with a very similar hull, I can be pretty confident its a delight to sail. Why are there none outside New Zealand? Because no-one wants one I reckon.


Coming from a cynical advertising/marketing background as I do, I have to say the market doesn't know what it wants until you tell it....

I still think that if there were a lightweights' version of the contender or musto skiff available it would sell really well.  There is, I think,  a prototype being built by Harprecht - I think Isabelle has her name firmly stamped on the one that may be brought over to the Contender Inlands in the autumn.

Without meaning to be rude to the bigger built gentlemen, the problem for these guys as far as skiff sailing is concerned must be partly one of agility?  You do need to be pretty nippy to zip around racks etc, and agility doesn't always go with size....sorry guys...
the same, but different...

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Post Options Post Options   Quote winging it Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 11:07am
I also think, given the economic climate, that at the moment, few boat builders are going to feel inclined to branch into new markets.  I would have thought this was a time for consolidation rather than experiment, which is a shame but the safer option.
the same, but different...

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Jul 08 at 11:28am
Originally posted by NeilP

Here's a radical idea: instead of spernding your lives worrying
about whether a I14 is more exciting than a Cherub, or where the next best thing is
coming from, try looking at the past and learning some lessons. Despite the scorn
poured upon it by this forum, the 470 has survived for over 40 years and the FD
still gets 80+ boats at a Europeans over 55 years after the first one was built. If
you're all as clever as you think you are, you might draw a comparison with many of
the SMOD's and perhaps come to the conclusion that the older classes were doing
something right after all. IMHO, what they are doing is offering challenging and
exciting sailing across a huge range of wind strengths and sea states. The older
"dinosaurs" are in fact, if you take the assy blinkers off, great boats. The 470 may
not be fast by modern standards, but who cares? Nobody could go sailing in a
newish, well set-up 470 and come back saying it's not a great boat. Open your eyes
people, stop worrying about how modern or fast your boat is. Pick a class you like,
with people you like and actually spend some time (years, maybe!!!) learning what
makes it go. I promise you'll be a better sailor, waste less money and maybe even
have more fun! That's what I did nearly 15 years ago, and nothing short of old age
and physical disintegration will get me out of my boat now. I don't care if the UK
dinghy scene's chattering classes think it's a dinosaur. It's my dinosaur.


One size does not fit all



In all seriousness, I totally agree regarding the 470, it is an exceptional boat, but,
and the but is the thing symptomatic of the times, it is quite a complicated boat for
a novice simpleton like myself to come to terms with. So the draw of the easier
handled and understood assymetric rig systems as employed on the boats most
people these days when entering the market aspire to, will inevitably draw them in
a different direction.

My very advice to the guy that's just Assym'd the 505 hull is to now bring the 470
up to date. There is very little wrong with the hull shape, but arguably lots of
outdatedness with the rig.

Back in the day when those rigs were created, there were no carbon masts, no
performance shaped windsurf influenced sails and sail cloth, gnavs and the
plethora of modern control features that a half decent sail designer can employ to
power & depower a rig (Not that you'd think it with a lot of modern crap).

So for a class to survive it seriously should evolve with these points in mind.

But ask any group of Class Racers if they want to change to something more
modern and they'll vote with their pockets and comfort zone. (I once had a 95% vote
against footstraps on windsurfing boards put to a vote of a particular long dead
class) That illustrates wing-wangs marketing point, often they dont know what they
need until some other class demonstrates it, which is why you end up with the
mess of splinters that now exists, that and lack of mass production facility for fast
light boats at the time of key market demand.

Edited by G.R.F
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