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The Solution.

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Post Options Post Options   Quote ds2 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: The Solution.
    Posted: 08 Mar 15 at 10:31pm
Was it you in 456 or was that the other solution? Glad your enjoying the new toy anyway.
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Woodbotherer View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Woodbotherer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 11:27am
Yep 456 had to check wasn't sure what the number was, Video of that start here
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Dougal Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 12:00pm
When I had a Solution I used a couple of strips of jap tape on the centreboard to keep it down.




Edited by Dougal - 09 Mar 15 at 12:06pm
What could possibly go wrong?
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Post Options Post Options   Quote AlexM Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 12:52pm
Sounds like you hit the bottom (the tiller cleat releasing and the board coming up)
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Post Options Post Options   Quote gordon1277 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 1:23pm
Looking at the video, if the rig is the same as the Phantom, in that amount of breeze I would expect you to be going quite hard on the kicker and beginning to rake to de power. Not that easy to tell from the short clip.
Does the rudder down cleat have tension adjustment?
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Noah Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 1:54pm
If the rudder downhaul cleat is the correct break-out clamcleat it'll have release adjustment via rotation of the cam under the front end of the jaws.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Woodbotherer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 2:25pm
tbh I've never come across a cleat like that I thought I'd bust it, I could have hit something there are lots of underwater shallow bits, but I didn't feel anything untoward and the blade was still unblemished when I put it away.

Kicker, yes a fair bit, it's bloody noisy, makes a scary banging sound when I tacked a couple of times, I found myself working it a lot, especially for the gybes offwind, there are lots of pulleys and maybe they're banging into each other.

This is a proper boat, with lots of proper kit on it, not normally targeted at muppets like me who other than the Alto have largely experienced 'more downmarket beach style boats' Lasers, RS's and the like, no disrespect to RS but their level of fitting out ain't really in Ovingtons league at the level of stuff (500, 100) I've had new before.

But with that comes incompetence at putting it all together, I've never had to attach the sail to the boom before rigging it for example, funnily enough a mate was rigging his Solo next door and he had to fit an entire bolt rope along the boom, what's that all about? Very inefficient what that must do to the flow.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Woodbotherer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 2:31pm
So another question then, was that windy enough to rake? I'd gone out with not enough rig tension I thought and wanted more on just before the start. It wasn't that windy at the start, it got up more as the race progressed, 17-18 mph according to Lydd 4-5 bf I'd have said and it was only 3-4 at the start I'd reckoned.

So at what point do you all start raking the rig?
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Null Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 2:36pm
STart raking as you feel overpowered Graeme, there is no fixed point.  When i borrowed my brothers Phantom for the Birkett last year.  I was fully raked with max-kicker in the top end 4 round by the Ullswater narrows.   You should be aiming to keep the boat flat for the majority of the time.  If you are sailing on its ear its slow, start dropping the rake back and raising the board.  You will be surprised how much quicker you go if you use the tools available to you correctly
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 Mar 15 at 3:21pm
Must be the cataracts Graeme, save for the vang swivel, the aero's are all Harken blocks :-)

If its anything like the supernova, you start raking when you can't keep the boat flat and yes the board can help, but thats a last resort when everything else is murdered on and the sail as flat as it can be. However, the raking allowed me to sail a Supernova in a very large wind range so it was certainly very effective with that rig.  
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