Rossiter Pintail Mortagne sur Gironde, near Bordeaux |
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Laser 140101 Tynemouth |
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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 |
What classes will survive ? |
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hum3 ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() Joined: 23 Jun 06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 247 |
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I'd rather good racing in a slower dinghy than rubbish racing in a faster one... I'm moving from an 800 this year to a 200 next (for reasons NOT related to the quality of the racing in either fleet, as they are both excellent), and I'm really looking forward to it! |
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DavidG ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 19 Jun 08 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6 |
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The topic is an important one, and I felt sufficiently strongly about it to warrant signing up to this forum, however since then many of the posters have expressed banal and off topic contributions to the debate.
The reality is that the only thing that really matters is our enjoyment of the sport of dinghy racing. For some of us it is about going fast, others get off on tuning, others like close matched tactical sailing in challenging waters. I am now of the opinion that clubs and people are way way more important than individual classes, which have a very narrow minded vision. If there is a good sailing venue, great atmosphere, fun people and lots of well matched boats, whatever their speed, dinghy racing will prosper. So my suggestion ref. classes is, work out the club and people first, then choose a class that is best suited to you. All I would say is handicap racing is rarely satisfactory except on a Wednesday night, so lets try consolidating into bigger one class fleets. |
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JimC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6662 |
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Something I observed in the bike trade, which I spent several years in, is that the very fastest aren't actually that much fun. If the guys fancied a bit of a trip they'd be much more likely to go out on smaller bikes that they could take towards the limit rather than something high powered that you have to back off all the time if you want a life expectancy of more than 3 months. As far as I'm concerned, having ridden, when I stopped bothering to count, well over a hundred different models of bike, and several hundreds of thousands of miles, riding a 150mph bike at 100mph isn't nearly as much fun as riding a 60mph bike at 60mph. I'd much rather ride a small, light and relatively low powered bike flat out than a high powered one backed off. I'd much rather sail my Canoe than a 60 foot multihull, and I'd much rather sail an old style moderate rig Cherub than a 49er. So no, hitting the boundaries is fun, but just plain speed doesn't excite me that much. Hell we all know that, that's why we're in sailboats not motorboats... On the "consolidate into big fleets": thee are countries that do that, and their sailing scene sucks compared to the UK. If I had to sail a Laser or a Solo I wouldn't sail at all. In any case, apart from the odd special occasion, I dislke sailing in a fleet of nore than about thirty boats: the race is three quarters over halgfway up the first beat, and what fun is that? There are a suprisingly large number of folk who feel like that, and why the hell not: its our time and effort. As for ISAF not listening: if you believe that then I recommend that this November you take the time to read all the submissions that come into ISAF from all the National Authorties, and then see how the decisions and the conference relate to that. When I did it I learned some big lessons about how folk in other countries feel, and they're a lot different from we rich westerners. And who the hell are we to tell them what to do? Edited by JimC |
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Nick Peters ![]() Posting king ![]() Joined: 08 Feb 06 Location: England Online Status: Offline Posts: 192 |
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Its the "small and nippy" sports car analogy: Small boats are often "fun" because they are small and manouvreable, they will feel fast without always being fast - the 800 sailor swapping to the 200 will probably get no less of a buzz downwind in 20kts of breeze. Back to one of the later posts and harking back to mine earlier - the clubs - will ultimately define the success or not of many classes. Sailors support the clubs support the classes, will, for many be the way of it.
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Nick
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Guest ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 21 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
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Perhaps not the best anology because of the risk of death/loss of license. However I have to say 160mph on an FZR1000 was more gripping than thrashing my VFR400. It's a matter of taste of course. That said the great thing about sailing is there are no speed limits and crashing generally is painless & inexpensive. I like speed, or perhaps the sensation of being on the edge ... Another example is downhill skiing v slalom ... |
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winging it ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 22 Mar 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3958 |
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I have to say that only racing at a club, all in one or two classes sounds like my idea of hell. I also think it would sound the death knell for dinghy racing simply because people will always like variety and it is the individualism of the sport that very often give it its colour. I really enjoy travelling around to different clubs when I do Opens and I see experiencing the variety this offers as both educational and fun - certainly a year on the Open circuit last year did my sailing a world of good after too long a period simply sailing at the same club. A good sailing venue, great atmosphere, fun people, well matched boats actually sounds like a typical Nationals or Open just as much as it could be club racing. Classes are very narrow minded? No - perhaps focussed would be more accurate? Edited by winging it |
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the same, but different...
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Chris 249 ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 May 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2041 |
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Rick re "Rubbish ... who likes going slow?" I would say that the hundreds of RS200 sailors, Laser sailors, Squib sailors, Solo sailors, XOD sailors, Pico sailors, Salcomble yawl sailors, Lark sailors, Scorp and Ent sailors enjoy going "fairly slow". All of these get biggest nationals fleets than the most popular skiff type. The sensation of speed is largely comparative and our enjoyment of is it subjective, or else a ride in cattle car in a 747 would be the peak experience of our lives. The MPS is a fantastic boat, but it's damn slow compared to the fastest singlehander (A Class cat) or the morning bus to work. Does that mean you don't enjoy your MPS? Of course not! If speed under sail is all-important, why bother sailing anything but speed boards or big cats? Dunno about the people who sail slow/medium pace boats around your place, but around here many of them are intelligent, experienced sailors (our Mirror champ is a former 18 Foot skiff "world" champ, former top pro windsurfer and Tornado worlds runner-up) who get a hell of a kick out of slow boats. He is not stupid. Who has the right to tell him that he is not having fun? |
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Guest ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 21 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
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Speed is all about sensation and perception not the actual speed travelled. I am sure people in any class will remember the sail in 25 knots over a drift in 5 knots. Going faster is more fun ... or do spme people prefer to drift around in light winds? This is not an issue of class A is faster than class B; it's a matter of its more fun to go faster than slower, isn't it?
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NeilP ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 23 Nov 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 271 |
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I'm not so interested in the fast/slow debate, as it strikes me as utterly ridiculous. Someone used the motorsport analogy, and clearly doesn't understand the motorsport world. The vast majority of people who take part in motorsport do so in pretty slow machinery. The challenge is in extracting the maximum out of what you have, not moving on to the latest, fastest thing to appear on the track-day map. If that were the case, everyone would be at their track-days driving Radicals What really winds me up is the attitude that "outdated" classes are labelled dinosaurs and should be killed off in some way, and this would make sailing more appealing to a generation that has the attention-span of a goldfish already. Classes will survive as long as there are people who want to sail them. I'm not convinced the emergence of (relatively) big business has been beneficial to the dinghy scene. Do RS and Laser really have any interest in building what people want, or do they in fact distort the "market" when they offer the latest rotomoulded, dumbed-down all-purpose tub with 0% finance, trade-in deals, ready-made "fun" social scene etc etc? Does anyone really want a Vago, or is it the easy option? I genuinely don't know, but I know I don't! Neil |
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No FD? No Comment!
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NeilP ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 23 Nov 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 271 |
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Rick - if you sail a class whose sole purpose is speed, then I agree. Sailing in 5 knots in a Cherub can't be much fun. Speaking personally I've had just as many memorable races in 5 knots as in 25. They're memorable for different reasons, that's all. Isn't that what sailing is really about, the endless search for mastery of all the different conditions we sail in? Otherwise we'd all be sat on the shore waiting for the 25 knot breeze Neil |
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No FD? No Comment!
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