Laurent Giles 'Jolly Boat' Exeter |
J24 (Sail No. 4239) Dartmouth |
29er GBR 074 Tynemouth |
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about a boat
Groupie Joined: 25 Oct 06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 60 |
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Topic: Solo Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 1:11pm |
So I don not know much about Solo's. Are they good, bad, tactical, forgiving? Etc Any views greatly appreciated.
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yellowwelly
Really should get out more Joined: 24 May 13 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2003 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 1:17pm |
If you have other Solos to sail against, they are great.
If you haven't got others in a fleet, then they're 'not bad', but there's probably a nicer alternative out there. If you were to give us more details about where you sail, what experience you've had and what you'd expect out of a boat- racing, cruising, maintenance, fitness levels, body weight etc we could recommend the alternatives.
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about a boat
Groupie Joined: 25 Oct 06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 60 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 1:37pm |
There is an esblished fleet. Not worried about alternative suggestions. Just wonderred what Solo's are like. The CA webiste seems pretty good. I will give one a go but just wonderred from a longer term perspective what they are like rather than an hours test sail.
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yellowwelly
Really should get out more Joined: 24 May 13 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2003 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 1:52pm |
To be honest if there's a fleet then look to the people you'd be joining- will sailing against them be fun?
Solos:- from my limited experience since Nov: They are not the most exciting boats from an adrenaline perspective, but the racing is exciting between them, even if naff all wind. They are certainly cumbersome with the centreboard casing that will require a bit of learned steps before the bruises on your shins disappear. You can't square the rig off because the stays get in the way, which means there's limited scope to run by the lee. However in most wind you will sit on the side downwind, which makes them very forgiving for bad knees and backs. The rules are very, very strict. This is either good or bad depending on your POV, but be under no illusion, they are strict and will stay strict and everyone knows where they stand, including people who will be turned away from events if they cannot present their measurement cert. I have a measurement cert and signed sail with an ISAF stamp, I would expect if I went to a class association open meeting for everyone else to be in the same position. The boats vary- expect to spend 3.5-4k to get a competitive one.... which makes them double the price of a Laser. Whether they are double the value, is a personal question no one can answer for you. It is for me. The rigs are not SMOD one design- this gives some choice and flexibility, but it adds some cost over the 'Laser / Supernova' alternative. I like this- I sit at the higher end of the weight range and can buy equipment which suits me and enables me to sail to the best of my abilities against guys weighing 70kg doing exactly the same thing at the softer end of the mast chart. Buy wisely and you won't lose your money. Despite the proliferation of new designs that may or may not be better, used Lasers and Solos consistently hold their value and depreciate in line with their expendable parts- in other words it's cheap sailing, once you've dealt with the initial outlay. There's room for a kid in the front. But it won't give them much to do. So if you're looking for a versatile boat, it's not the best. A mirror, feva, graduate or miracle might be better for versatile cruising- one adult, one little kid. |
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JimC
Really should get out more Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6649 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 1:52pm |
They're in the mainstream of the 50s/60s dinghy boom sort of boats really, reasonable all round performance without being sparkling in any respect...
Unusual features include that even though not self draining they come up near enough dry if you right them from in the water rather than standing on the board, which is great if you can climb in over the side, not so great if you can't. They still have lots of water in if you right them from standing on the board though. They have fully battened sails which mean the rags last about 5 times longer than anything with short battens. By comparison with modern designs they're relatively slower in breeze and not so quick to plane, but they'll hapily distribute clouds of spray about in a bit of breeze and provide entertainment. Notoriously good in light airs/roll tacking conditions. Old glass fibre ones are ruddy awful and best avoided, but the modern sandwich plastic boats are very good indeed, often better than a good wood one. Might be the best selling singlehander for adults in the UK at the moment, as so many Lasers go to youngsters now, bu certainly second only to Lasers. People talk a lot about tactical this and so on, but all boats seem to me tactical with different emphases... I personally find the boom horribly low, but quite obviously hundreds of people manage! Its a boat I'm happy about recommending as a first singlehander, the only caveat is getting back in the boat after a capsize esp for shorter folks and those with less upper body strength, and that's something worth trying. As they mostly have transom flaps a good trick if you have trouble getting in is to hang on the back and open a transom flap until the stern sinks enough to let you clamber in. Edited by JimC - 10 Jun 13 at 1:56pm |
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about a boat
Groupie Joined: 25 Oct 06 Online Status: Offline Posts: 60 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 10 Jun 13 at 3:37pm |
Thanks chaps - all very informative.
Edited by about a boat - 10 Jun 13 at 3:38pm |
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