Crabman
Well-Known Member
thats a theory!
How does the keel get longer?
The keel is not the waterline!
I know , do bumps work, no , ask the designers ,there responsible .
thats a theory!
How does the keel get longer?
The keel is not the waterline!
Would I like to sail IOR now, no, there are some really fast good boats with less hastle.
what's a "rooster tail"?
Not heard of that.
I know , do bumps work, no , ask the designers ,there responsible .
what's a "rooster tail"?
Not heard of that.
It's the stern wave that comes up higher than deck level.
I think it's wrong to try and attribute handling characteristics to 'the IOR'. It was a development rule and all sorts of shapes were designed in an attempt to optimise performance and - sometimes - to fool the rule. I sailed two boats regularly under IOR and they couldn't have been more different. The S&S Swan had a pinched-in stern, and would roll downwind in any wave train. You had to damp the rolls by spinnaker trimming. If you got it wrong, the third roll would be followed by a broach. The Steven Jones half-tonner had a broad stern, and was a doddle downwind, albeit you had to crowd as many crew as possible onto the windward quarter to stop it trying to submarine.
Was the demise of IOR due to spiriling costs?
not sailing performance then? or perhaps too much hassle?
Here we go, are you trying to say that racing a ton cup boat and getting it all together in the 70's and 80's was not hassle ? Get the certificate back and it was wrong then you had to get it re-measured and inclined not hassle? OK I will go and get one built ,oh I forgot 1/2 tonner then was 250k should be cheaper now.
Was the demise of IOR due to spiriling costs?
Don't understand.
rating rules inc IOR are changed to remove racing inequalities and to avoid racing extremities from creating unseaworthy boats.
Production costs surely have little to do with it?
Was the demise of IOR due to spiriling costs?
Don't really recognise that scenario.
I don't often race on 40.7s, but I have. The Elan I race on is however pretty similar in many ways.
I have never, ever, been beaten to the windward mark by an IOR boat. That includes a swan that is 4 foot longer, every sigma 38 in the Solent and others. Simply put the harder it blows the further in front we are. To win under IRC you have to be fast upwind, not downwind. Hence the trend to T keels.
Also there was an Impala 1 & 2 in class four of the Winter Series.
Ah but how much of that is he crews Ed? Elaine and Flair are two of the best boats in the Solent upwind but everybody knows that they are also two of the best sailed. It's no coincidence that they are both Elans either, three cuts above a 40.7 and I would summise that both boats usually beat most things.
The RORC yacht of the year was an old Nic33 a couple of years ago. In amateaur offshore classes, IOR boats could almost be said to dominate. in JOG its Scarlet Oyster, Old Mother Gun, Moon Dog and Longue Pierre who keep up with and beat the Xs.
Is this because they're better boat or better sailed? Or is it the age allowance in IRC?
Also there was an Impala 1 & 2 in class four of the Winter Series.
Ah but how much of that is he crews Ed? Elaine and Flair are two of the best boats in the Solent upwind but everybody knows that they are also two of the best sailed. It's no coincidence that they are both Elans either, three cuts above a 40.7 and I would summise that both boats usually beat most things.
The RORC yacht of the year was an old Nic33 a couple of years ago. In amateaur offshore classes, IOR boats could almost be said to dominate. in JOG its Scarlet Oyster, Old Mother Gun, Moon Dog and Longue Pierre who keep up with and beat the Xs.
And there you have it, handicap. One design please ,thank you ,every time .